Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

WHERE THE OLD HOUSE STOOD

 


After your funeral I walked, by memory, to the old house,
as if I might somehow find you lingering there,
as if the years had waited all this time, unchanging.
But the old house, dear brother, was nowhere to be found.
A new one stood in its place -- charming and respectable, freshly
painted, with an impossibly green and manicured lawn.
Nothing you would have recognized. Only the trees
seemed familiar, the old and stately oaks grown older still,
the fan dance of their shadows wavering at my feet.
They would know you, I'm sure, as the lake water would,
as I barely had time to before you were gone.
We are becoming part of the past, dear brother,
a world which we had no idea we were creating as kids;
and it's something I can just about see if I narrow my eyes,
the way a rough sketch hidden beneath a painting
can be seen when held up to a particular kind of light.
Would you mourn this loss with me, I wonder.
Or would you perhaps be grateful, as I am, that no one now
can sleep where we slept, dream where we dreamed;
no one will smoke unfiltered Camels on the slanted roof,
the chilly autumn sunlight looking on in silence.
Those rooms where we laughed, where we fought, talking
long into the night, stand within these walls of words --
every door and window intact, every creak and groan of that
shifting house familiar. It all belongs to us now.


Thursday, June 26, 2025

FROM ROOM 104A

 


Overnight, with little warning but a small stitch
turning in your side, and a bit of blood where blood
should not be, you have entered the land of the unwell.
This is the kingdom of white surfaces and sanitizer,
of hushed voices and bedpans clinking, IV stands that
resemble coat racks, and curtains behind curtains,
of paper shot glasses and silent shuffling feet.
You are wheeled from one cool room to another,
quietly and efficiently, the ghost-flicker of ceiling lights
passing like the lines of a highway leading nowhere.
You count backwards. You repeat your name until it sounds
like something foreign, far removed from its source.
You listen, while the faceless man on the other side of
the recovery room coughs and moans all night,
talking, in fitful sleep, to the mother who is not there.
You wonder if your daughter will visit, wonder what day
of the week it might be, and whether you will be
able to write a poem without a window, something
you hadn't realized was essential all this time.
That's where the world is, after all, the one you wish to
return to, in spite of it all; and if it's not exactly new,
or all you had hoped for, it will never be the same
as it was when you left it only days before.


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