Solitude
She used to greet the day with song,
a radiant spirit cheering up the block,
sparking a swirling incandescent glow
like the Northern Lights at night.
Clinging to her plush pillow remembering
lush thighs with a deadened vacant groin,
a hint of her presence is in a scent
between the sheets. I’ll stay in bed forever.
I’ve never lived alone. It’s eerily silent,
a nudity of unfurled stillness.
After I put my wife to rest, glaucoma
has left me almost blind.
My parchment-covered cold hands
grope for meds, listening for the jounce
of pills, feeling their size and shape.
This day will never end.
Searing pain pierces the marrow
of my bones. Abandoned as a scared
child waiting at a lost and found.
Who will take me home?
I glumly stare out the window barely
seeing pin-points of light, tiny drops
of rain glisten in the gray of morning
mist on the bare limbs of a mulberry tree,
tender swelling buds about to bloom.