42opus
is an online magazine of the literary arts.
2 December 2004 | Vol. 4, No. 4
Lament
This pack of pot-bellied songbirds squats
at gutter's edge all night, passing butts
of Lucky Strikes and belting the blues.
My window's stuck up and I'm laid low.
Podgy wrentit in Wayfarers and tweed,
You bust a mean harp, daddy-o.
I'm lachrymose and shivery. Shattery. Torn
up. Curled in a fetal fit, smelling my knees,
going la-la-la with fists in my ears
and cramping calves. O Mommy,
what has become of your abandoned boy—
bedeviled by the blue funk and nude,
supine and stony in a damp twist of sheet,
ghost-white as the moon under lamp glare
and the shadowed undersides of cruel
cruel birds? And what of the moon?
What do you have to say for yourself, cyclops
of my endless nights? I yelp at you, waxy
moon-man, lone scoop of sky lard. I sink
my teeth into you. I cleave. I shred.
Mr. Salver of sad, sad nightcheese, I howl.
O woe. O woe.
About the author:
Andrew Michael Roberts is earning his MFA in poetry at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. His work appears or is forthcoming in Margie, the Iowa Review, Quick Fiction, Sentence: A Journal of Prose Poetics, Cue: A Journal of Prose Poetry, and Double Room, among others. In prior lives he's been a flower bulb farmer, firefighter, kindergarten teacher, camp director, and poetry editor for the Portland Review.
Source:
http://42opus.com/v4n4/lament



