Poetry |

“Suspect Routes” & “Explain the Heart”

Suspect Routes

 

Beyond this camp lies everlasting snow,

smooth marble, bones picked bare: Frigid abode

where spurned fools pour gasoline on embers,

feeding unspoken thoughts to their remorse.

And fire answers promptly, jumping higher —

hot roar exploding with the hoarse

cough of a predator bent on murder.

Thus life consumes so many who set forth,

pursuing happiness on suspect routes —

by ambulance, like garbage down the chute,

in darkened rooms with fever through the roof.

Stripped of their peace, such pilgrims take the whip —

self-shriven — chastisement supplying proof

against derision when one’s darling slips

away in snowglobe swirls of yore; when loose

tongues are undone; when absences persist

as loss, and even nightingales fail to seduce.

 

 

◆     ◆     ◆     ◆

 

 

Explain the Heart

 

 

Inflamed by myth, the hero’s broken heart

Spills floods of love, which slosh and spread, wine-dark

At midnight — or whenever girls shed clothes.

Heart in his throat, he fears old fears exposed.

 

Explain the hero’s heart.

 

Primarily a symbol to the young,

Seat of affection, instrument to strum,

Red swoop pierced by an arrow when in love,

Abode of peace should truth come from above —

 

Explain the heart!

 

Just ask his cardiologist, okay?

Five hours on the table  — no one prayed.

His heart’s a fancy muscle, hauling freight.

Its murmured rhymes seem utterly passé.

We don’t require poetry today.

Contributor
Chris Waddington

Chris Waddington has enjoyed a long journalistic career, including stints as an editor, critic and reporter for metropolitan dailies in New Orleans and Minneapolis. His short fiction has appeared in The Quarterly, Guernica, Exquisite Corpse, and New Orleans Review.

Posted in Poetry

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