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Ian Webber May 2012
Not the moon itself, but the light that fell from it*
reflected off the papery wings of moths
I almost mistook for shooting stars.

“Surely that’s not the ending”
Lauren slurped her soda noisily
as the credits began to roll.
“Shirley doesn’t live here”
was my only reply.

Cars began moving backwards
in my window, while pebbles
hurled themselves toward my windshield
as if to say
“Don’t. You’re not ready for this”.

My heart that had jumped during
the movie explosions not 5 minutes
earlier, was now oddly still.
Quietly shouting its disapproval.

Lauren didn’t make a sound
when we passed the street to her house
nor when my tires left gravel
and began rolling on sand.

Nor did she make a sound
when my tires hit the water
coming in from the lake ahead
as the car plunged into
the black black depths
and I could no longer control
our descent.

A moth fluttered against my window
trapped, as the moonlight disappeared.
It looked nothing like a shooting star now.

“Surely this is unfair to the moth”
my heart tried.
“Surely doesn’t live here”.
Ian Webber Apr 2012
It’s a special day to be born.
Today, the twin towers fell.
9/11 shall always be remembered.

Today a Sargent General took his last breath
while a child took their first.  
Two mothers cried.

Today Jesus died.
today He rose.
Remembered, the day
but not the date.

Today, you were born.
Today my smile stretched, luxurious
and the breeze tasted exotic
the hospital smelled like life
rather than the usual death.

Down the hall, I watch a small girl
shuffle down the hall, her hands
vacant and small. Her eyes were fogged over
she hadn’t realized her braid was coming undone.

Today it rained and a tsunami just hit Japan
tidal waves washed away countless lives.
Today someone is alone, with empty hands.
Today is your birthday.
Ian Webber Apr 2012
When I was cleaning the toilet
I killed my angel
because I brushed her off my sleeve.
to be fair, the devil suffered a fall
as well, but he only dropped a few feet.

The porcelain surface gleamed
in the light cast by the single bulb
flickering valiantly to stay alight
like the little engine who could.

The bathroom was my place of refuge,
it seemed like the only place I received
some privacy whenever my parents were home.
I reverently removed my Superman wrist watch
and placed it on the sink alongside my vintage
Spiderman lunchbox complete with a thermos
and collapsible spoon.

Inside the thermos I had hidden a pack of razors
I swiped from Jim’s Hardware store; he was nearly
blind, but liked me because I always cleaned his yard.
I set the razors on the edge of the bathtub for a moment
and only looked at them.

When someone knocked on the door
I refused to answer.
Ian Webber Apr 2012
I caught your attention
for the first line! Now I
throw in some literary
devices, rhetorical or
syntactical with special
care to keep the lines ba-
balanced and even. make
sure punctuation lines
up and rhyme the last
syllable.  time for a
different stanza?

Abstract word insert
here, connect to the
title and relate all the
connotations that mi-
might be associated
with my work of
beauty. Crap. I’m
running out of ideas.
Refer to dictionary:
it doesn’t help me.
What makes me sad.
Ah. there’s the final
touch.
Ian Webber Apr 2012
My Grandma had a purse shaped like a cobbler.
It was Blackberry and soap with a good dose of thyme.
She kept it close to her side, but behind her
so as not to impede her graceful march.
At some point the original strap had been lost
and replaced with a cherry red confection
that swirled around her arm and latched
onto the top crust that is always the most crunchy.
A few buttons were picked up along the way
and dotted the top layer like ladybugs dancing.
The zipper was never fully shut and there was often
a receipt sticking out, or perhaps her pink comb
that waggled in the air like a tongue in delight.
It wasn’t a big purse; just enough to satisfy
a healthy craving but big enough to care
were you not to see it present at dinner.

I have almost forgotten the healthy craving,
the smell of Blackberries, and why the ladybugs
should ever want to dance.
Ian Webber Mar 2012
Breathing life onto a cold clear surface
is what God can do, I think.
Mixing a swirling crescendo
of silhouettes upon a backdrop
of cars, streets, trees, people.

Exhale quickly, and draw quicker
life disappears before you finish
into the quagmire, the muck of the bend
temporary distraction for a transitory
exit.

Inhale quietly, don’t steal the heat
perspiration , steam, and fog
cover up each picture like
time-worn scabs,

but when the fog fades
the imprints stare back at you
a lumpy mesh of creation
without soul, without release
stuck in the drawing board.
Ian Webber Mar 2012
With a whistle the beeper shrieks 6:45
once a day every day all today
blaring, beeping, beating
Stop! Breathe.

Steaming water hisses into the house
weighed down by romping kids
grabbing, grasping, gathering
always on the go.

I smother my day with febreeze,
and mix, stir, boil my life into simplicity
choking, gasping, breathing
Stop.
Breathe.
Go.
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