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Timothy Carter Dec 2020
I arrived late to the after-party.
People wearing worker’s caps
are foraging among the table litter,
carrying paper plates of cake
and sandwiches wrapped in plastic.
All I want is one small treat,
to savor before the evening’s done.

I sit beside a smiling stranger
and rummage through my paper bag
to find a corkscrew.  
All the wine is gone, she says.
But we can drink champagne
from plastic glasses.
We should have children soon, she says.
But something sweet is about to end.
I say that I should go now.

Outside in the desert, soldiers
fire a volley in the air.
A salute, I think.  A valedictory?
Then they lower their rifles
to point at me, and I see
that they are still shooting.
Timothy Carter Sep 2020
The Sleeping Gypsy

Halfway up the stairs
we paused,
seeing our frozen selves
one foot above the other,
mirrored on the wall.
Reflected flesh being able
to complete the step
and take another,
we found at last
the famous painting
by Henri Rousseau.
A Customs man, they said,
could never show
the truths of savage life
that real travelers
would know.

The sleeping gypsy smiles,
his breathing slow.

Beside him lurks a lion,
tail suspended,
Skin and sinews bursting
in his ragged mane.
Will the silence of the gypsy’s lute
be ended?
What slake of water
could his shattered urn retain?

Purpose,
certain as the cudgel
in the gypsy’s hand,
is absent from the light
that blanks the desert sky,
that bathes the beasts
upon time’s lapping sand
And gazes,
timeless,
through a lion’s eye.

— The End —