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An old house in New Orleans whose backyard I explored during a break sparked this. |
A poet lived here. He sat at this desk read these books hid tomes about O.J. Simpson underneath the landing to keep the taint of his sister’s misguided gift from corrupting his Hemingway. Nobody understood that his books were as precious as his baby daughter who watched him from her crib by the open window. He looked out this window. watched the rain’s apologetic sobs splatter the panes. Tried not to write a poem titled “Rain”. Tried not to write about how he was scared. Fathers aren’t supposed to be scared (even if they are lonely because their wives left them to find real work above sea level). His baby girl was crying because she just dropped her doll outside her window and Baby was drowning. A poet had to grab his child leave his books behind in the storm to stand on his rooftop with floodwaves soaking his shoes, while comforting his baby girl who was still crying because Baby was drowning. And as he climbed into a government-issue boat Brought to you by your neighborhood friendly war distracted temporary disaster relief effort. He tried to forget that his library was dead. For his little girl was still crying because Baby was drowning. |