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Andrew Hanson Jan 2015
At Ellis Lake, an overcast Sunday afternoon.

A lake divided into two, oddly shaped bowls in the middle of the city, surrounded by a constant stream of birds, wind, and traffic.

A spotless white swan cleaning herself on a grassy knoll, ferretting out whatever filth lurked deep within her feathers, then smoothly sweeping her sideways bent head across her back, as if to remember the long forgotten affectionate touch of an absent lover.

A gaggle of four grey geese combing the lawn for food, waddling in unison side-by-side.

A line of five mallards barreling down the hill into the water.

A multilateral crescent of black and white pigeons receiving harsh dictation from a trio of angry snow geese strutting before them.

A red-faced duck slowly approaching in the quiet expectation of food, then the arrogant acceptance of the lack thereof.
Andrew Hanson Jan 2015
Eleven years ago
A Saturday afternoon
Warm
Movie on the couch
The phone rings
Mom is crying
We drive quickly
The hospital seems small
Aunt and Grandma are there already
Grandpa is hurt
He's not in the room
We're alone
Waiting
A doctor comes
He's emotionless, stoic
He talks with us
Grandpa is gone
Dead
Hope crumbles, ceases
We weep, wail, embrace
I'm angry, enraged, betrayed
I leave
But
Solitude yields no better solace
I return
Still angry
Dad comes in
He's crying
Dad never cries
I cry, too
The sheriff comes
He talks about paperwork
He talks too much
We go see Grandpa
He's just lying there
A pillow beneath his head
A blanket pulled to his chest
Still
Silent
Sleeping?
He's gone
But still here
The next day
Sunday morning
In church
We sing
We sing about standing
Standing in heaven
In heaven praising God
Grandpa had trouble standing
His legs were weak
But that morning
He had no problem standing
No problem
At all.
Andrew Hanson Jan 2015
It tends to be dark at night
When the shadows move quickly
About your door,
Following you with eyes
That you feel
But can't see.

Alternating between worry
And calm, your heart
Speeds and slows
Until you walk inside
And realize you're alone
In more ways than one.

When you thought
You found love,
But it was acquaintance
Instead. Then you
Turn on the light
And sit in the darkness.
Andrew Hanson Jan 2015
There is an opera singer
Of Friday morning parking lots,
Whose soft solo soars
Over empty spaces,
Through sleeping trees,
Past dimming lamps—
And then flutters
Between your ears.

All is still for now:
The wind holds its breath,
The birds stop their wings,
The trash drops its odor—
All is still
Till she stops singing
Her sweet, slow melody.

Now the sun can rise.

— The End —