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An award winning poem from Meter, Muse & Rhyme
A steamy day in Cicero, a 1940 GE fan at my feet circulates dead air around thin ankles. President Clinton promised something today, and I gave a dollar to the DAV; neither accounted for much on a pension like mine; things had been worse. Almost a year since Charlene’s death. |
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Her broken son, like a limp tender shoot, was draped over her left arm, asleep; the mother wailed shrill screams at the priest kneeling near her in small puddles of blood. The air, filled with sounds of battle, was mute as though the shimmering burst of lights were flashes of heat lightning; soldiers were running in slow motion; they’d stop to shoot someone; she didn't care, she was a mute in a delirious dream. "He is asleep?" she begged. The Serbian priest nodded, blood dripped from the child's ear, and the sad priest |
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She wears the night as though it was her own.
In subtle gestures, swings her head and hips,
and walks the boulevard in search of bone
to satisfy the hate her heart now grips. |
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