Tag: poetry

Ordering Doubt

Ordering Doubt

Eating out, I stare at the menu
Then you ask me if I need some more time
And I’m lost in words but manage “yes”.
Guessing which picture accompanies the text,
I’m vexed by constant revision.
Indecision, I order doubt.

St. Joseph’s Strength

St. Joseph’s Strength

St. Joseph, I know you had it rough.
You couldn’t be blamed enough
In fact, every family feud
That you imperfectly pursued
Ended in you being wrong,
Mary and Jesus were right all along.
In arguments, you’d take a step back and say, “It’s me”
So that all the world could see
A man’s love is that strong.

Imagining the Third Day

Imagining the Third Day

I imagine your hands with dry crusted blood,
Post flood with hard-caked, mud-baked flakes
In fragility so that when my finger acts like a nail
Disbelieving this frail humanity
My thoughts break away
And take away your flesh.

Exhausted

Exhausted

I lay down in an uncomfortable position
Predestined for the acquisition
Of pains I should avoid
But tiredness is annoyed
At the thought of changing
My body parts in need of rearranging.

Smells Like Spring

Smells like Spring.

Smells like worms,
Germs of a beguiled creature,
Now a defiled feature
Of the air inside my nose
That knows soon enough they will bring
The spring.

Early morning poetry

Early morning poetry

Sometimes I get up early,
Twirl the idea of
Falling back asleep around in my head,
But end up on the couch writing poetry instead.
Its language of love captures my fingertips.
Pressing a key that slips
Letters in lines of verse.

Often by design,
Syllabic swells align
Like roses I bought on sale,
Beautiful, but slightly more frail
Than full-price strong-stemmed roses,
Smelling great to un-snobbed noses.

All In

I like when the library calls and tells me I’ve got a book in.

All In.

Where have all the books gone
When the ones that remain on
My shelf are not inviting,
unexciting.

So I’m bookless and waiting
for the library to call
and leave a message stating
that my books are all in

so I can stand up
as if I’m about to lose everything,
walk away from life and get lost
in the cost of overdue fines.

Dirty Clothes

I don’t wear dirty clothes in the evening.  But when I change into my pajamas, let those clothes sit in a pile overnight, and find them in the morning.  They’ve become dirty clothes.  This is a poem about that oddness.

Dirty Clothes

I reach down and bring up my clothes
So that they almost touch my nose,
Take a sniff to get a whiff of yesterday
When these clothes were okay.

But disease and infestation must have swarmed
Around my clothes last night and transformed
Them as they lay on the floor
Not to be worn anymore.

Before I went to bed, they were clean
But some mystically unseen
Power has taken a hold
Of those clothes and made them old.

I need new clothes this morning
Because without warning
The clothes that were perfectly fine
Are now those dirty clothes of mine.