They placed him on the spit
they placed him on the spit
to roast the bones away
turning in and over
over and in he was
turned.
finally a respite
after a breathless morning
the oppressive heat had soothed
like tea drowning out the beggars cough
to singing.
finer meats had lain
before on the king's table
but everyone remarked
on how the bones all were
missed.
policemen on the corning
waving their batons
conducting us in our nightly
calisthenics in the prison yard
to Wesley's
And can it be
that I should gain
no one knew what we stood
to gain, and bent over back
to see the policemen upside
down, between our legs
smirking
and the smell – wavering –
falling down into our arms
left us sickened, drooling
over ourselves
broken.
Canada Dry
Canada Dry had always been his brand.
He was buried face-down in a
wheelbarrow
and all we could do was stare,
wet eyes,
as they layered the pavement in around
him.
He was a Canada Dry sort of man.
Once he caught the wind in his sail,
and the whiteness brightened his face
as he let go,
Crouching in amongst the rest of the
bones.
all he would allow in his house was
Canada Dry.
His was a dry county, and a drop never
passed his lips
Damn though the man could drink
bleary talk,
followed him down the steps of the
church,
jumped in the wheelbarrow next to him.
He had never met his equal
he had never met his equal till he'd
met her.
So they were married.
After he divorced his first love,
who'd clung to him at the altar
and smiled up at him till death.
But the yokes were unequal.
And in this age of atheism
intellect was our religion,
so the non-believer had to go –
the priest had declared it inevitable.
So the celebrations were under way
with Freud administering the rite
of passage. And the wine
had stained his beard.
But no one noticed,
they all were washing
their own faces out.
To assimilate more into
the pale afternoon,
old men and Young
were dancing together
as their wives and wives
looked on and laughed.
There was no jealousy any
more among the elite,
everyone drank his own wine
and someone else's.
passing it around,
for that was what the wine loved
best. what it was meant for.
We all laughed at the pining,
hating, passionate houses
down the road,
at allowing themselves
the weakness.
She had taken up a house
along that row,
after their divorce.
She'd understood, because
he'd explained it all to her,
how he missed being drunk,
how he would take to drink again.
So she'd offered him the very
best she had. But it was raw,
strong, bitter, new, peasant wine,
distilled on the mountain,
running in the stream,
and it was unequal to the wine
he'd aged and cultured in the musting
library for all those years,
for he'd been taught by the very best.
He had to put off her peasant drink
and go shopping in the asylum
because as the priest said:
We must not be unequally yoked
with the unbeliever.
When the feasting was underway –
for they were all drunk on the old,
just as the wine they pressed
would get their grandchildren
drunk...
she walked up the lane
and looked into the frosted
windows
to watch the marriage feast.
Freud lifted his arm in a silent
toast.
And she knew that they had been
unequally yoked.
It was good that she had lost her first
love.
Smile, smile. Till death.
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