THE IMPOSTER
I’m dreaming I’m on a wild roller-coaster ride
soaring past an array of galactic milky-white clouds
catapulting off for a soft landing with the screaming
of those left behind ringing in my ears.
Looking around all I can see is what Gertrude Stein
once said about Philadelphia: “There is no there there!”
I then find myself sitting behind a palm frond
in a darkened chapel with Callimachus’ designed
acanthus leaves decorating the wall, dim sounds
of an acapella choral thrum faintly in the air.
I can barely hear what sounds like a eulogy
for a well lived life. A few anecdotal memories
resonate with who I am, becoming more familiar
when mourners are amused by what a pack-rat
the deceased must have been, collecting a mish-mosh
of cluttered memorabilia: cross pens, vintage toy cars
and planes, Zippo cigarette lighters, Indian pennies
and a mountain of ephemera bearing traces of my imprimatur.
I perk up my ears when they report finding a stash of poems
that can’t possibly be mine when I catch fragments of what editors
had to say: “plainspoken durable narratives…” each line a bouquet
of the mouth,” “eloquent, innovative and finely crafted.”
When I actually hear my name, I leap out of my chair,
protesting: “You’re making a whole foofaraw out of poems
that couldn’t belong to me, a bumbling scribbler!”
But I’m invisible and my voice cannot be heard
as I awaken feeling like an imposter.
Milton P. Ehrlich