Delayed Departure
You growl and moan death rattles
Send a howling wind across the room
Haunting deep songs echoed
Your baby brown eyes are closed shut
As if a tailor had sewn them permanently
To prevent one last look, one last glance
Your dry tongue cracked like the earth’s desert
On the roof and sides of your mouth
Resides a collection of yellow pus like material
A crackling cough is produced with congestion and mucous
Airways now clogged with life, delaying your wished departure
You are late, but your flight will take off
Bad breadth swarms your last cries
Your fresh new diaper emanates
Smells of shit and urine
You bring your left hand to your head
Combing your hair in the opposite direction
Your left arm crosses to bring your limp right one to your chest
Right leg lays still and lifeless
With a gathering of toes overlapping toes
Your nails are fungus ridden, on both feet and your right hand
You look like a photograph I’ve seen from the Holocaust
One of those humans in a pile on the street
Discarded but never forgotten
Your skin is melting off your skeleton
The skinny bones now draped in flesh
Falling off your frail frame, discarding their use
Fragile and splintering
Like a wishbone about to be broken
A twig fallen from the autumn tree
So pale and ghostly
You are white as a winter day
Flaking into eternal dust
Every day you were cold
Bundled in sweaters and shirts and layers
Now you remove the sheets and blankets, warm, moving toward the light
The oversized diaper reveals
Your thin scattered pubic hair
Long strands like Okinawa grass coming forth
Blood clots and scabs and bruises line the contour of your body
Gateways and damns preventing life and death
Your chest bruised from where we tried to wake you
Dentures sit in a plastic jar of water on the porcelain sink
Your aged cheeks sunken in, your moustache still proud
When you sneeze, your left hand automatically wipes your nose
Weight has gone rapidly, more than before
Your wedding band is too big for your thin finger
The ring is sliding off, slowly inching towards the dirt below
Your nipples protrude stiffly through your hospital gown
I can see the impression of the pacemaker on your chest
And feel the slight amount of hair on your arm
Your body quivers now and then
In an uncontrollable vibrating motion
Your knees and legs tremble to a rhythm unknown
You still carry a full head of hair
Thick grey hair so white
You have hair of God
When I kiss you goodbye, afraid I am not
On your cheek, your lips, your forehead
I say goodbye every day
© 2009 David Greg Harth
09.12.07.11:18:47@306Greenwall2545UnivBronxNYC