SEVEN DAYS THAT NEVER END
There was only one person who had
“straightened him out.”
Now, the glittering gold leaf mirror is draped
in white linen, a candelabra lit, a minyan
assembled for kadddish with an improvised
tenth man, a Baptist neighbor.
He shuffles from bench to bench sniffling
in slipper’d feet in seven days that never end.
Embraced by guests bearing sublimely scented
bouquets of freesia, lilies and mimosa,
they arrive laden with trays of gravelox,
ratatouille, gorgonzola with emerald
green grapes, rugelach and honeycake.
Withered by grief he hunches over, an imploding
conch, head drooping like a wilted daffodil.
With the strength of a gnat, his heart pumps feebly
like a sludge-filled motor with worn out rings.
Looking around the room he weeps for young women
with cheeks rosy as pomegranates who should be as lovely
as flowers but are too zaftig to be sexy.
Mitzvah seeking mourners groan a lamenting chorus
of “Vos iz gevehn iz gevehn,” palsied hands unable
to bring a shaking cup of tea to their lips.
A kindergarten friend no longer remembers his name.
Agonizing about what more he could have done for her
he dreads fending for himself, frazzled by a gnawing hunger
for her presence, alone as a lone black crow on a leafless
branch squawking into the starless night air.
Milton P. Ehrlich 199 Christie St. Leonia, N.J. 07605