Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Today I felt my death stalking me, breathing its genderless ice breath down my neck-- giving me visions of my semi-truck and trailer sliding off the edge of this icy cliff, or that one, with me inside, the close-up showing me with that concentrated look of someone who is unsuccessfully trying to avoid coming to terms with their imminent demise. Needing to change the doomed channel, I stopped flirting with death long enough to park my rig in the big gravel lot of Dot's Cafe, and eat lunch. Compared to cold death, wrinkled baby tomatoes and wilted lettuce were good-- real good. The gray cucumber guts disemboweled all around my salad plate looked better than mine would have, at the bottom of that cliff, I'm sure.
0
Feb 1, 2011
Feb 1, 2011 at 6:45 PM UTC
Crossing the Rockies in Winter
Today I felt my death stalking me, breathing its genderless ice breath down my neck-- giving me visions of my semi-truck and trailer sliding off the edge of this icy cliff, or that one, with me inside, the close-up showing me with that concentrated look of someone who is unsuccessfully trying to avoid coming to terms with their imminent demise. Needing to change the doomed channel, I stopped flirting with death long enough to park my rig in the big gravel lot of Dot's Cafe, and eat lunch. Compared to cold death, wrinkled baby tomatoes and wilted lettuce were good-- real good. The gray cucumber guts disemboweled all around my salad plate looked better than mine would have, at the bottom of that cliff, I'm sure.
michael-s-simpson
Written by
74/M/American
Feb 1, 2011
Feb 1, 2011 at 6:45 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem