LETTER TO MY DYING FRIEND
I regret I can’t be with you as you await
your final breath. You always wanted copies
of my poems so I thought you’d want to see
my tear-stained tribute since eulogies never
do get heard by the deceased.
You were my most honorable and loyal friend,
passionate about history, you seemed to have
stepped out of a bygone era, a courtly gent
with a quality of civility no longer seen.
You still tipped your hat at the ladies
and would have gladly kissed their hand.
An ultimate gentleman, you viewed the world
with child-like eyes, bewildered by injustice,
greed and the violence of the vermin in our midst.
When your business went bust every creditor
was paid off down to the last cent.
You were always much too literal in your quest
for logic and rationality, perplexed by the mindlessness
of your fellow man. Reluctant to become computer literate
you were puzzled by what grim faced workers produce
staring at computers screens all day long.
Your life was never easy, the only son of a World War One
cavalry officer who imbued you with the steely determination
of a Nelsen Mandela. You fled from the demons of Vienna
to the White Cliffs of Dover only to endure the terror of the Blitz.
I never understood why you had to be geographically
oriented at all times, always asking if we were traveling
east or west, north or south, curious about the names
of each and every town .You may soon be moving without a map.
Your life-time habit of giving will prove to be a reliable compass
to get you where you must be going. At your new destination
I hope you’ll still be able to come rushing in with a six-pack of
Heineken beer the way you used to do at the BYO Mezza Notte lunch.
Don’t forget to order your favorite mushroom-barley soup before taking
your place as the most luminous light in that vast sea of shining stars.