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#canyousmellthesmoke
When that day of reckoning comes (Hopefully, some light years distant, As I like anyone else, cling stubbornly if not desperately To this process of plodding aimlessly along) Where the book of myself is closed, I have asked, Though how I plan to enforce the wish remains an open question, That I am not Cadillac-carted to some incongruous green space Where some dark-clad and stiff-collared stranger Bounces pebble-laden soil onto the top of my bedding for the ages. Much better,  at least to my way of thinking, That the remnants of my essentials Are strewn upon some cold Adirondack lake, Or perhaps if its current residents Are sympathetic and not particularly litigious, The backyard of my childhood home (I have not fleshed out that particular portion of the equation, As I, like most people, am much less emphatic about my do’s Than I am concerning my don’ts and won’ts.) On the odd occasion, I am visited by a curious dream Concerning my departure from this particular plane; There is a fire, though not some vast, heroic Viking pyre, (Even my reveries have a certain reserve about them) But something less prepossessing, Like some small pile of leaves, Such as my father burned when I was a young boy, And a black-suited cleric stands before the flames, His face only somewhat familiar, yet still comforting (A distant uncle or favorite teacher, perhaps) And he litters the embers with the residue of my corporeal self With words absolving the folly of my acts of commission (The stumbling footfalls of the blind; throw them on the fire) The shortsightedness of my omissions, (Boorishness of children and fools; throw them on the fire) The sum of my shortcomings and misadventures (Victims of our angels and gods; throw them on the fire) And the trails of smoke drift aimlessly upward, Toward birds who cackle and twitter unconsciously, Oblivious to all the machinations below.
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Jul 27, 2021
Jul 27, 2021 at 1:58 PM UTC
a small fire
When that day of reckoning comes (Hopefully, some light years distant, As I like anyone else, cling stubbornly if not desperately To this process of plodding aimlessly along) Where the book of myself is closed, I have asked, Though how I plan to enforce the wish remains an open question, That I am not Cadillac-carted to some incongruous green space Where some dark-clad and stiff-collared stranger Bounces pebble-laden soil onto the top of my bedding for the ages. Much better,  at least to my way of thinking, That the remnants of my essentials Are strewn upon some cold Adirondack lake, Or perhaps if its current residents Are sympathetic and not particularly litigious, The backyard of my childhood home (I have not fleshed out that particular portion of the equation, As I, like most people, am much less emphatic about my do’s Than I am concerning my don’ts and won’ts.) On the odd occasion, I am visited by a curious dream Concerning my departure from this particular plane; There is a fire, though not some vast, heroic Viking pyre, (Even my reveries have a certain reserve about them) But something less prepossessing, Like some small pile of leaves, Such as my father burned when I was a young boy, And a black-suited cleric stands before the flames, His face only somewhat familiar, yet still comforting (A distant uncle or favorite teacher, perhaps) And he litters the embers with the residue of my corporeal self With words absolving the folly of my acts of commission (The stumbling footfalls of the blind; throw them on the fire) The shortsightedness of my omissions, (Boorishness of children and fools; throw them on the fire) The sum of my shortcomings and misadventures (Victims of our angels and gods; throw them on the fire) And the trails of smoke drift aimlessly upward, Toward birds who cackle and twitter unconsciously, Oblivious to all the machinations below.
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