Saturday, November 2, 2013

Epitaphs

I can hear the leaves crunch neatly under my feet
The air is sharp and inhales
On my eyeballs and cheeks and the tops of my hands
At 4 P.M. I walk. Looking

at the mounds who
Were people in another October.
Families together in plots

My eyes search for quotes
That are pretty words.
I feel the heaviness of dead.
We are looking for meaning.

She is hard to live without,
Nevertheless, not my will but thine be done
Reads one.
Not yet thirty, mother of three.

He had a good run,
Reads this one. I smile,
It is nice because he was ninety.

The rest are surprising
They only have names.
They are Wife of,
Husband of

No graceful list of accomplishments
Majestic verbiage,
Worldly meanings,
Just two names.

They were defined by the people they chose to love.
They were the wife of, husband of, somebody
When we are so dead
For so long, that nobody knows
That is how they will know who we were.
I like that.

Remembered in the context forever
Of the people we chose and choose.

I was so worried about a good enough quote
But “quote,” means it belongs to someone else.
My own words are not even mine.
(This is all plagiarized anyway)

but not a name.
That, that can be totally and completely mine
A person and I belong to them.
In a hundred years

When some girl in a college class goes to my cemetery
I want her to know that I chose, and somebody in my life was
worthy of sharing my headstone.

That a person, all mine, was my epitaph.

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