Ramona from Assisted Living outside work, where the ringing bells remind us of death with every tone; how a small girl wandered, an archetype hundreds who gather, hand in hand for three hours walking the cold rows long past sunset to find her. while they slumber in wheelchairs, tilt toward perpetual dusk until a waiting hand finds them. For the Birds bright canaries and gray lovebirds nest, their orange beaks pecking at straw and string, My concerns fall from the glass, collapse to the floor like heaps of empty husks and seed shells. chirping their stories to residents, visitors, nurses, anyone who pauses long enough for hello. grandmas and grandpas. They behave like the framed prints on the wall, overcrowded and sad, small eyes looking for something not found.
E. F. Schraeder's creative
work has appeared in Haz Mat Review, Corvus Magazine, Bluepepper, Kicked Out,
Whitechapel 13, and elsewhere.
|
Saturday, April 14, 2012
New Poetry by E.F. Schraeder
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
two great poems, e.f.
love 'ramona from assisted living':
echoes of sebold's the lovely bones
(imho, you're the better writer :))
Post a Comment