| The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Michael C. Davis
 
 
 THE END OF THE BRIDGE
 For once, there is no traffic.
 
 We cross Old Lee Highway
 and proceed down
 Lorcom Lane
 past the Episcopal church,
 the branch library,
 the gay man's house
 with the yard of ivy
 my brother used to tend.
 
 We make all the lights.
 
 I see that your face is now
 mine, and my sibling's.
 But the hair
 is yours, a dark
 and curly cap that almost hides
 your ears.
 
 We don't need to say a thing.
 
 The poplars over Spout Run
 arch in full leaf,
 pressing upward from the stones.
 Your hand,
 as middle aged as ever
 firmly grips the blue plastic
 of the wheel.
 
 We roll
 
 on well-greased hubs
 down the roadway and turn on
 to the river's edge. It's been
 a long time since I've been
 in a car with bench seats
 and nylon upholstery.
 
 Up the ramp,
 
 the way is clear.
 Georgetown's stone towers
 signal the far bank
 and I anticipate
 the light at M,
 the shift to cobbles,
 the old trolley tracks
 all of it suspended
 momentarily
 as the bridge drops away
 and the car falls.
 
 The river rises
 
 to smash through the glass
 and metal. Mother,
 I have not seen you in 20 years.
 Where are you taking us,
 I ask the face that is now mine.
 
 
 
 PERSIAN MINIATURE
 
 Tamerlane sits on two rugs,
 one only partially unrolled,
 apart from his retinue.
 
 His wine bearers are frozen
 in gestures of offering.
 
 Across a small creek
 whose voice will mingle
 with other melodies
 musicians sit
 and pluck harp,
 tap tambourine.
 
 Fire of battle
 still smolders
 in the exalted one's eyes.
 An orange tree
 behind him
 offers untaken shade.
 
 The great city of India
 lies at his feet,
 taken.
 There is no parade.
 
 A simple shift
 covers his back.
 Violets embroider
 the grass
 carpeting
 the hillside.
 
 The music
 is not heard,
 nor the voice
 of the brook.
 The field lies ready
 for the scythe.
 
 
 
 SIMPLE MEDITATION ON THE THIRTIETH PSALM
 
 One day after I have chipped at the ice for years
 you appear, one leg at a time. The thaw
 draws back like the smile of a ghost
 and you lie, surrounded by your goods—
 your knitting, a letter, the last New Yorker.
 Then your lids flutter and your eyes open,
 denying the last visit your husband and son
 made to the hospital to remove your rings
 and leave you naked for the end.
 
 So now the box that arrived 300 days later
 filled with your ashes was just a joke!
 Through it all you just slept, even as we dribbled
 what remained of your bones
 through our fingers and read a psalm:
 "Shall the dust praise thee; shall it declare thy truth?"
 
 Your face now beams as innocent
 as the moon, slow with sleep
 and the cold. I hold it in my hands to warm
 the frozen cheeks. You ask are there grandchildren.
 How is the house? What's for dinner?
 I wrap you in a coat and help you down
 the path, up the stairs. All the while you whisper
 how it was cold, and so heavy. Unbearable.
 
 You will find that everything has changed,
 and nothing comes up to expectations.
 The grandchildren will not recognize you.
 The house has long since been bulldozed.
 Dinner waits in some other oven but not ours.
 And we nag. Why did you go and leave us?
 
 We wished to have mourning
 turned into gladness when we sat on cold stones
 and let your life pass one last time through our fingers.
 And all the while the birds sang
 for love, or out of duty, how could we know?
 The landscape was just a scrim of life
 over the mineral world that will endure.
 
 And here you are today, a wraith,
 a wisp of smoke. One last time.
 All hope against hope. A handful of ashes,
 a face staring up from beneath the ice,
 a hand reaching through fire that none survive.
 
 
 
 Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
 
 
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