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#andsowerollon
He’d been away for any number of years, Days cascading over the spillway of time Into pools of weeks, oxbows of months, And though the town was much as he remembered it (Though a little more tattered and careworn: Another broken windowpane here, A wall in grave need of paint there, One or two more storefronts gone to plywood) The cemetery was all but labyrinth to him, A corn maze of granite and narrow drives, The plots having metastasized, the stones having spread Like so much crownvetch overpowering the simple grass, But he’d been able, after any number of false-starts, Uncounted instances of double-backs and do-overs To locate his father’s marker (The man gone some forty years now, Taken by…well, who knows what His mother, stunned by the prospect Of having to step into the dual role As nurturer and breadwinner, Too stunned to even think of requesting an autopsy.) He’d come, ostensibly, to make his peace (Whatever that hackneyed phrase entailed) But he’d ended up, if not as mute as the stone he faced, No more than a cow-country Caliban, Haltingly sputtering bits and bobs of half-phrases Concerning the implacability of accidents, the vagaries of chance The coffin-lid limits on mere men and women. He’d given up the ghost, finally, And as the daylight slipped away on the bumpy old horizon He’d simply brushed some dried bird guano from the gravestone, Then picked the dead bits from the flowers Doing their level best to hold on In the urn he’d wrestled from his mother’s ancient station wagon Two, perhaps three, days ago Before settling back into the car to try to divine the way Back to the main road (He’d found it in surprisingly short order, And perhaps a quarter-mile or so down the road, He’d come upon a small rabbit, Frozen mid-lane by his headlights, Finding himself in a world not of his making Not knowing whether to flip or fly; He’d missed it by mere chance, nothing more, And he wondered if the poor thing Would be so lucky with the cars behind him.)
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Feb 10, 2021
Feb 10, 2021 at 12:39 PM UTC
an incident of headlights and headstones
He’d been away for any number of years, Days cascading over the spillway of time Into pools of weeks, oxbows of months, And though the town was much as he remembered it (Though a little more tattered and careworn: Another broken windowpane here, A wall in grave need of paint there, One or two more storefronts gone to plywood) The cemetery was all but labyrinth to him, A corn maze of granite and narrow drives, The plots having metastasized, the stones having spread Like so much crownvetch overpowering the simple grass, But he’d been able, after any number of false-starts, Uncounted instances of double-backs and do-overs To locate his father’s marker (The man gone some forty years now, Taken by…well, who knows what His mother, stunned by the prospect Of having to step into the dual role As nurturer and breadwinner, Too stunned to even think of requesting an autopsy.) He’d come, ostensibly, to make his peace (Whatever that hackneyed phrase entailed) But he’d ended up, if not as mute as the stone he faced, No more than a cow-country Caliban, Haltingly sputtering bits and bobs of half-phrases Concerning the implacability of accidents, the vagaries of chance The coffin-lid limits on mere men and women. He’d given up the ghost, finally, And as the daylight slipped away on the bumpy old horizon He’d simply brushed some dried bird guano from the gravestone, Then picked the dead bits from the flowers Doing their level best to hold on In the urn he’d wrestled from his mother’s ancient station wagon Two, perhaps three, days ago Before settling back into the car to try to divine the way Back to the main road (He’d found it in surprisingly short order, And perhaps a quarter-mile or so down the road, He’d come upon a small rabbit, Frozen mid-lane by his headlights, Finding himself in a world not of his making Not knowing whether to flip or fly; He’d missed it by mere chance, nothing more, And he wondered if the poor thing Would be so lucky with the cars behind him.)
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