Old Sam in Room 322
Old Sam in Room 322
at the nursing home asked
the nurse to push his bed
near the window because
in October he likes to watch the leaves
on the Japanese Maple change color
from their summer green
to the red, yellow and maroon of fall
before the branches go nude for the winter.
The nurse chuckled and said
she hadn’t heard of his interest
in trees and nature and Sam said
watching the leaves change color
and fall off slowly reminds him of
his wife getting home from work
and taking her time to change clothes,
comb her hair and primp a little before
smiling and coming to bed.
Butterfly Poems
I sit here at peace
and mind my own business
and hope for a butterfly.
I never take one out of the air.
I paint only the flight of the butterfly.
When I see one float overhead
I drop everything,
grab a brush and a pad.
I don’t want to miss a color.
A butterfly flying
is more valuable
than gold.
A Day in the Lives
It’s Monday not Sunday
and the frail lady
in black is the only
person in the pews.
She walked in with
the cleaning crew,
four Bosnian women
in aprons and kerchiefs,
women of Islam cleaning
a Christian church
in the middle of America.
They are refugees settled
without fuss years ago.
They dust and vacuum
and keep an eye on her
sitting in the front pew
still as a statue.
They can’t see funnels
whirling in her eyes
and they don’t realize
she was there on Sunday
for the morning service
with her husband
who passed the basket
and took her to brunch.
They don’t realize
she will be leaving soon
to go where he is
to pick out his casket.
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Donal Mahoney lives in St. Louis, Missouri.
wonderful work! a typology of descent; leaves, clothes, and wings funneling.
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