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My brother left (Revisited)

1.

Before I knew he had.

His flight trailed off into a Utah

Sunrise. He left behind a little strand

Of thought, and, in a cramped, amber room that saw

Long talks of topics that soon thinned grey,

A set of dog-eared books has been put down.

Books that brought nearer to my thought his own,

While Interstate-5 grated the ground.

 

2.

He must have, as the plane touched the runway,

Felt the dawn’s shudder fracture his young bones,

His thoughts turning to those dog-eared days;

The seemingly endless months full of groans,

As they should have been, being spent alone;

And that set of books, at least it would seem,

Ignited the wick on which our passions gleam.

 

3.

These six years past since they took him away

Held minutes like a needle in plied dust.

There’s something in the spring that brings decay:

The outward beauty of the world just

Clouds the mind’s loss within the spinning gust

That all the blooming flowers usher in.

Then the rain comes...

 

4.

As the 5’s scratch cracks up the drying earth,

I recall Nietzsche, Guevara, Burgess:

Men who’d not anticipated births

Inside my brother and I like cypress

Trees, evergreen and coniferous, we

Drop seeds year-round. The setting Utah sun,

Barely audible, gasps in the copse.

He’s with me now. What’s done is done.

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Written by
christopher-howard-gorrie
American
Published
Aug 20, 2014
Lines·Words
34·224
Tags
#loss#brotherhood#guevara#nietzsche#burgess
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