Regarding The Pond
The pond has
been here long enough
to be unbothered
by thirty years of my absence.
It was unmoved
by the three jobs
I held down in
that time,
where I was
living or the women I dated,
not even the one
I almost married.
For thirty
years, waters
have flown in
and out of the pond
as they did
before I was born,
as they will
continue to do after I’m gone.
The pond belongs
to topography, I to humanity.
All we have in
common is belonging.
No Son Of Anyone’s
He no longer
maintains contact with his father.
He has no phone
number, no email address,
not even a town,
a city or a state.
The old man
could be living in Togo
or Leavenworth
prison.
And who knows
what color his hair is –
brown or gray or
white.
He might even be
totally bald.
And what does he
suffer from?
Arthritis?
Gallstones? Late-stage cancer?
At night, lying
in bed, his mind rotates through
the day at work,
an argument with his girlfriend,
the pain in his
right shoulder that needs attending to.
He’s a worker, a
lover, a patient.
That he could be
a son never occurs to him.
Divorcee
Lying in bed,
she makes peace
with the dark,
that shadowy
complement
to a life
long-lived
with the worst
of others.
The cars can
rumble by,
bats flap
against the window,
shots ring out,
fireworks
explode,
and werewolves
and vampires
burrow deep in
books
never again to
be opened.
And he’s gone.
The bruises have
healed.
The bad memories
are finally
outnumbered.
The dark is just
a factor of the earth turning,
Not some other
turning on her.
How To Take It Out On Yourself
He lies on his
bed,
contemplating
how to really hurt someone.
Grab hunks of
hair and jerk it from the scalp.
Snap an arm like
a rotting tree limb.
Rip a nose out
of its roots.
Poke a finger in
each eye.
An elbow to the
ribs.
A straight hook
to the jaw.
And why not a
boot up the backside
for good
measure.
He knows what to
do
and even who to
do it to.
The last man
standing…
who just happens
to be lying down.
From A Homeless Man
You've seen me,
I'm sure,
deposited on the
brown river bank
at low tide,
stumbling here,
lolling there,
totaling up the
losses in my head.
I have made a
life's work
of collapsing in
a heap
of bottles and
cans
and day old
half-eaten hamburgers,
Nowhere is there
solace,
not even in my
memory,
those brief
flashes from the dark pit.
I am
unreasonable
in your eyes.
I struggle to
find shelter
where you can't
see me.
Like in a
flophouse.
Or a grave.
I'm weary so I
will make a bed
of newspapers to
lie on
Somewhere out of
sight of course.
Your comfort
means everything to me.
JOHN GREY
JOHN GREY is an Australian
poet, US resident, recently published in Sheepshead Review, Stand, Poetry
Salzburg Review and Red Weather. Latest books, “Covert” “Memory Outside The
Head” and “Guest Of Myself” are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in
Washington Square Review and Open Ceilings
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