WHISPERED VOICES
The setting sun is a slant of gold,
bright as grieving yahrzeit light.
A hush of wind barely moves the leaves
on a grove of ancient honey-locust trees.
Galaxies away, musty voices of the dead
are barely audible. When I was a boy,
parents laughed or cried for no reason
that I could understand.
In a delirium of nostalgia, I mine artifacts
of days gone by in scenes behind my eyelids.
Outside of a hand hewn beamed cabin
I see my Shakespeare fishing rod
chewed up by beavers,
there’s Dad’s Borgward that ran great,
an Evinrude, a Coleman canoe, a portage
at Lake Nominingue where we drank water
from the lake and chased bears cubs away
before their mother returned.
No longer huddled in a Stanton Street tenement,
we luxuriated under a blue sky of beveled glass.
Elated to discover Ojibwa fossils along the shore,
but, when the sun set, we had to jump in the lake
to escape hordes of black flies and no-see-ums.
Phantom souls murmur life is unfair,
and warn me not to expect to rise above
the double calamity of cancer and heart failure,
and the unspeakable loss of a brother and son
in an unwanted war.
I’m curious of what it’s like to be dead
and wonder what they see back on earth.
Family and friends must wait for me
to join them adrift in oblivion.
Loved ghosts fill my dreams and mumble:
“We are all scarecrows who don’t fool anyone,
especially the crows.”