Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
1940, 1970 and Today – plus other poems - 10. ...at day's end...
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Poem No. 24
Pen and paper,
white-clad forelegs
and the eyes of a poet.
“Not beauty. Not again,” he thought.
“That word comes back
“every time my soul seems stirred;
“Not this time.” He looked up
because he was being looked at.
An average man, a black-double-breast,
turned his eyes away.
“Cute enough,” he thought
and wrote; the first line now
joined by a second, then
by a third.
‘Today the train swells,
the every-bodies and them
placed in seats around . . . ‘
He glanced up. The black-jacket
glanced back, but his eyes,
to the other’s surprise, looked not at him
but what rested on a notebook
there on his thighs.
Pen and paper,
white jeans, shaved head,
he caught me looking at him.
A young man, beautiful, living
on the train that carted all of us,
the far-more dead, back and forth
to our pseudo lives.
“Not beauty, not again,” he thought,
but his song would not be sung
without it. Let me finish it for him.
Poem No. 25
Tanka:
Two boys on bikes are
Calling ‘bye’ out on the street;
Through autumn twilight
Their voices call like waved hands,
Never doubting reunion.
Poem No. 26
Tanka:
An empty mailbox,
A machine that’s unanswered;
These are the hard ones
At day’s end to overcome,
These small everyday sorrows.
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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