“It seems that when there’s a death it takes
a little bit of our amusement away.”
— my daughter as a child
.
I’m packing enough
for the impending flea market: We are
vendors of jeweled dice,
peddlers of old signatures’ pen-edges,
bare second-hand divans in the rain.
Preparing the circumspect steps of transfer —
death, of course, but also stealth,
eviction, dissolution, maturation.
I bring the lonely pickle dish with
social purpose almost no one means now.
Tinned French Great War bandages
still give off scent,
mildewed, medicinal, soaped, or sweated.
Can I lay by for the end of the world
just these oddities and a paperclip,
maybe a softball bat to establish a history
of obedience (Go outside and play)
and fair play (Play fair)?
If I have to grow outdated and faint
into a trader’s showtrunk,
I know I’ll consist of scores
of diaries priced for less than written value.
Sell part of me but not my whole
soliloquy. Consider toy-sweat on a doll dress:
One side of life is rougher;
one side of taffeta outshines the other.
Published in Certain Uncollected Poems, Ostrakon Press, 2012.
This one speaks to me, especially at this time and with family that shows little interest in artifacts of family history.
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