I set up a plastic mouse trap and left the house.
When I came back, I’d caught one. The trap
hadn’t even broken the skin, but the mouse
was dead and I was grateful for the bloodless
counter top and the peaceful look on the mouse’s
face when I dropped him into the trash can.
He still had a peanut in his mouth.
If I should ever have to kill a man, I hope
it will happen the same way: bloodless
and quick, no visible injuries, an open
casket funeral, and a look on his face
that made it seem possible I’d just done him
a great charity–that I’d taken him before
his life got any worse, before he could do
whatever it was I had to kill him for
trying to do–hope still shining in his eyes.
I'm back to writing a poem every day, whether they stink or not.
Saturday, December 03, 2005
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2005
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December
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- God
- "The House"
- Chutes and Ladders
- Fame
- I spent all of the snow in the land of Doh,but I p...
- Not Impressed With Death
- Giving Up On the Protagonist
- Watched Through Dark Windows
- Man, Work and Woman
- The Song of Time
- A Dream About Fear and Love
- Darkness and Light
- Snow Angels
- Kansas Gets It's Kids Back from God
- Learning Coffee
- Pouring Hot Water into the Snow
- Killing Animals
- Regeneration
- Inside My Home at Night
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December
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1 comment:
Sometimes you write a poem my telling a little story and then seeing what the story tells you. Then you think, what was that story thinking?
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