2010 Quill Award Winner - Best Long Freeverse Poem and Best Overall Poem (edited 2/28/11) |
After a Hellfire Sermon Wallace Stevens comes to mind as the same ladies I once knew sit in pews and dawdle in such dress as they are used to wear. They apply their painted smiles and say they haven't seen me in a while. It's been years. How have I been? What am I doing with my life? They'll take anything, save an answer. I tell them. I want to be a writer, a poet - An artist. Their naked eyes detach and wander, settling in emptiness. Nervous laughter cuts dully at the weighted pause. Theirs, not mine. Words meander out of stale coffee breath, reaching my face, heavy and humid. “Well - good luck with that.” They wait for me to walk away just far enough, before craning their necks towards each other, sharing V shaped frowns that, together, look like migrant geese. I know the thoughts that hide between shaking heads, and their tongues smacking “tsks.” “Such potential as a boy. The man is not an artist.” Vapid gossip cannot touch my calloused pride, but their words mix with the organ’s exit music and rattle the covered chord inside. Know this – my greatest fear lies in those words. The man is not an artist. But such judges cannot own them. The man is not an artist. Because I know, The man is naught, if not an artist. |