Tuesday, February 07, 2023

New Poetry by Louis Faber










Afterlife 

In the farthest reaches
of the afterlife, the old men
gather each day, although
day and night are meaningless
to them, just assigned
for purposes of the writer.

The Buddha recites sutras
hoping the others will
be in the moment with him,
while Hillel smiles, stands
on one foot and dreams
of a lean pastrami on rye
with a slice of half sour.

Christ muses on when
mankind might be ready
for his return visit,
and Hillel says "good luck
with that, it's been downhill
with them for two millennia.

Schrodinger sits off
to the side staring intently
at the box, wondering
if there is a cat inside.


- © Louis Faber 2023


Louis Faber’s work has previously appeared in Constellations,  Alchemy Spoon (U.K.), Arena Magazine (Australia), Dreich, Atlanta Review, The Poet (U.K.), Glimpse, Defenestration, Tomorrow and Tomorrow, North of Oxford, Rattle,Pearl, Midstream, European Judaism, The South Carolina Review and Worcester Review, among many others, and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. A book, The Right to Depart was published by Plain View Press. He lives with his wife and cat (who claims to be his editor) in Port Saint Lucie, Florida.

 

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