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Poetry #151
(published September 11, 2003)
Remnants
by Tom Sheehan

My grandfather ran the city dump,
burned clinkers in a little house
he made of scrap. On cold nights drunks
slept in that makeshift haven.

They knew the welcome of his fire,
the monger's stove to wrap around,
hot curbing to prop cold feet,
quick difference from the frozen air,

wind-swept railroad tracks, bare entry ways,
darkness where howling ghosts abide
or, last resort, slim cardboard wrap.
The lost, lonely birds came to roost,

flew in at dusk. He stoked the fire
to stir up flames, dried their feathers off.
Just as often he left his lunch about
like tasty suet hanging in the yard.

On Saturdays I brought his lunch,
dense laminates of meat and bread,
thick and heavy and coarse as sin,
brown banana we would not eat,

molasses-brown coffee in whiskey
bottles wound about with paper bags.
I never saw even one pint bottle
finished off within his grasp,

rarely saw his small hand feeling
inside a paper bag. His birds
did the picking, had suet choice,
hens dining before the cock.

When he died they came to grieve
the savior of their awful nights,
the drunken, besotted, brothered band
who so often drained his cup,

mottle-skinned, so soured of life,
pale host, the warred upon and beaten,
they came to cache the little man
who offered what was left of God.

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The Next Poetry piece (from Issue #152):

On the Dangers of Contracting Marriage
found and arranged by the Giant Squid


The Last few Poetry pieces (from Issues #150 thru #146):

May 1943, Saturday, Sun Shock
by Tom Sheehan

Dear Madam
by Tom Sheehan

The Unknown
by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld

Pig
by Graham Catt

The Closet
by Radames Ortiz


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