Showing posts with label dying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dying. Show all posts

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Escapes

An elephant escaped
the Point Defiance Zoo
and strode the streets
of Tacoma briskly, briefly,
as if going to work.

At a summer party
my parents threw, outside
in the High Sierra, the ever-
silent plumber, Otto,
sipped whiskey. He
saw a horse come up 
to the pasture fence.

Otto climbed the fence
& leapt on the horse, 
which galloped and tossed
him off. Otto got up,
came back, climbed over,
and sipped more whiskey.

First time
her husband struck her,
she loaded the two kids
and some luggage 
in the Chevrolet and drove
away, {No more of that shit,}
she said to her friend.

The old woman 
who had fought cancer
for five years lay
in a hospice bed,
comatose--but suddenly
woke--tried to get up
and run away. One last
attempt before
entering the light. 

hans ostrom 2024

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

As My Generation Dies

&
^
#
_


Generation Blues


Death's eating into my generation
as it's done with every other one.

I knew it was coming but am
transfixed and awfully grieved still.

A heart-attack here, cancer there,
suicide, accidents, crime . . . "He wasn't

feeling well, so he went up to his
room. They found him dead a few

hours later. Stroke, they think."
The funerals mostly bore me.

Boredom makes me feel guilty,
although the one spoken of isn't

there, and if she or he were, he
or she would be bored, too.

Eventually I'm moved. There is
that one point in every funeral.

The generation blues is an exercise
in sitting still, as in kindergarten.

It's about wondering who's next
and thinking nothing matters--

until after the funeral, when again
we get caught up in life, which matters,

until the next one we know dies, and
we become still again, or the next one

is me, is I, who, dead, will get
instantly and forever still and might

be talked about to people who are
getting fidgety, thinking when will it end?


Copyright 2011 Hans Ostrom