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Requiem(Stop the Press)
Stop the press;
Twas the papers sold my mother’s death.
Breadth taken from the back of news wagons
from Crier boys with nickels in trousers tucked
into their loafers.
In the maternal process,
she rested, curled up as I in her
Heady womb; casket opened to her closed eyes.
Somewhere at a desk: A clerk with carpel-bound hands
Pushed her out.
Between two men; the classified and Home Garden pages,
I saw her open casket
A footnote to cover her feet; a headliner to veil her face—a blemish pimpling, popping,
She rests on my porch now—words with no life;
and the porches of my neighbor—my brother—my son,
caught between letterheads; a residential graveyard, buried under bills--
for the urbanites who bought the last piece of her;
an arm, a leg, recited by newswriters— stories historians penned
then forgot forever.
It’s in those words, the blanks I see; the void between the type, of papery colorless abandon
That haunts my dreams.
Not the honeysuckle perfume she wore; dressed in black for Sunday Church
Or birthdays in the wide parlor and songs ripped from her joy-spurning voice; sweet harmonic
lungs.
It was in Times New Roman that I knew my mother best;
Was not long before birthdays in the parlor left; candles lit under lightning smiles
For a rich man; a man who appreciated
Beauty
Always you wrestle inside me;
in my son who knew you less than I—
Who couldn’t remember your maiden voyage; a name. Had only old photographs—ersatz-flavored
recall--crumpled in the an old chest; you must have left behind.
Never did innocence flee as knowledge swallowed you; did you know his name?
Between two men; you chose
a mother I can’t recognize from memory—like a caterpillar turned butterfly
Did you remember us mother; the caterpillars still on the leaf; of innocence, happiness—
remember lives past
When you jumped in front of that train, blaring, billowing down the track.
I remember you;
In requiem—for a nickel trapped between two men;
In the obituaries.
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