Elegy for the Before Times

We threw dog kibble near the shoreline, and the pond

bubbled with catfish—their mouths sieved, their tails

paddled one another, the froth of the water was loud

and wet. What else could we feed them? An irregular

 

heartbeat? The hopeless pitch of a human scorned?

I’ve learned nothing today except to keep my mouth

shut. The neighbor hangs purple ribbons from the oak

in her front yard, and though we chat across the cul-de-sac,

 

I don’t ask what the ribbons stand for. Instead, I worry

that I’m supposed to know without asking. On the news

tonight—oh, who am I kidding? I haven’t watched the news

in years. A dog barks in the distance at the same time

 

a feral rooster alerts us to dawn; I’d dispose of the rooster

had I a rifle and a soul dark enough to pull the trigger,

but I’ve no use for guns. Did I mention I haven’t watched

the news in years? Those school children, parishioners,

 

movie-goers, and innocent bystanders were killed dead,

will stay as such. I don’t know how to mourn them

or those that survived them. Best I can do is look out

this window and describe the slant of light, the beauty

 

just outside my reach. The setting sun ignites the underside

of the Bradford pear’s leaves almost enough for me

to ignore its odor, the setting sun blazes through the fence,

the setting sun. They say it’s beautiful, our last breath.


Also by Gary McDowell

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