LAST RITES by Susan P. Blevins

Image | MART PRODUCTIONS

LAST RITES 

Night is the hunter of lonely souls

no place lonelier than shuttered city

in the small hours

 

Melancholy strains of Eric Satie seep out of

ill-fitting windows onto cold wet

city street

 

A sleepless soul sinking deeper

into hopelessness with each

despairing note

 

Homeless woman pauses to listen

shuffling feet interrupt their journey to

final destination

 

Jealously she drags her piece of hard-won

cardboard behind her, peering

over her shoulder

 

The soft sad music reminds her of days long gone

when she had roof and food and

warm clothes

 

Even a piano

 

All gone now, victim of a heartless political

system which beggared her with medical costs

when mortal illness struck

 

She lost it all to pay her bills

and now the cancer holds her in its

final death grip

 

She has a place she has come to like

and carefully lays out her cardboard bed

the last rites

 

She places her weary body on cold

wet city street and surrenders

her final possession

 

Last Rites was published in 2018 in Beakful.

 

© Susan P. Blevins 


Susan P. Blevins 


Susan P. Blevins was born in England and subsequently spent all but the first twenty years of her life in Italy and the USA. She had a weekly column in an international newspaper while living in Rome, and now publishes her writing in various literary publications worldwide.


Follow Feed the Holy


Comments

  1. Susan,

    So powerful and sad, and of course ultimately tragic. Who knows how many of these small, private rituals transpire all around us in cities? The tiny line, "Even a piano," struck an emotional chord with me. But I must say, your opening line is incredibly powerful, and of course true. Congratulations on this important publication. Press on!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Please be supportive and kind in your comments.

Popular Posts