My poem “Inconvenient Cemetery” was just published in a British poetry anthology called Enclosure, exploring how we partition land for the public good or private use. It’s available on Amazon, and has a wonderful selection of poetry. Here’s my contribution, previously published in Red River Review.
Inconvenient Cemetery
At a corner where two 6-lane highways cross
lies a 32-soul cemetery.
Bindweed crawls on crooked markers
reading Beloved Mother, Cherished Child
Too Soon Gone, R.I.P. George Lindstrom 1842-1905.
Around it sprawls a shopping mall
with Neiman Marcus and Forever 21.
Home Depot is across the street
and a Landmark 12 Screen Cinema’s nearby.
Once this was a village crossroads
where The Church of the Nazarene stood.
Gravestones wore flags and geraniums then.
Kinfolk came to mourn here, and churchfolk
came the day before Palm Sunday with kaiser blades
and trowels so it looked nice for Easter.
But the old church burned in ’29,
and members gravitated to The Church of Christ.
Then the suburbs spread this way, and well,
you know the rest.
Developers want the site for Arby’s,
but dead Nazarenes need relatives’ permission,
archeologists and legal briefs to move.
Not worth the effort, shrugged the planning board.
So they’re swapping the rundown Victorian fence—
iron with rusty curlicues—for a wood one six feet high.
Today they set the posts, and only one guy crossed himself
when a marker that said Always In Our Hearts fell over.
A privacy fence they call it.
Once it’s up, we can all get on with life.
Good one
Sent from my iPhone
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Thanks, Steve.
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Great poem.
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Thanks so much, Judith.
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Poignant. We see much of this in the States (certain parts). Your poem is beautifully written.
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Thank you. When I submitted the poem to the British anthology, I warned that it was perhaps US-centric. I saw the little cemetery that spawned the poem on a cross-country trip from PA to Colorado.
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❤️
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Congratulations – you’re International, now!
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Thanks for stopping by, John… er’ Mate!
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Congratulations, Sara. Well deserved, a wonderful poem… “Today they set the posts, and only one guy crossed himself / when a marker that said Always In Our Hearts fell over.” –
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Thanks so much, Rajani. It was a poignant scene when I saw it.
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Nailed it. Again… Well done, Sarah
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