Frank Diamond’s poem, “Labor Day,” has recently been nominated for a Pushcart Prize Award. His short stories have appeared in Innisfree, Kola: A Black Literary Magazine, Dialogual, the Madras Mag, Reverential Magazine, Empty Sink Publishing, the Zodiac Review and the Fredericksburg Literary and Arts Review. He has had poetry published in Philadelphia Stories, Fox Chase Review, Deltona Howl, Artifact Nouveau, Black Bottom Review, and Feile-Festa. He lives in Langhorne, Pa. One Night in Harpoon Henry’s When my first wife died I withered and withdrew And lonely did I scale the couloir of grief Curling about myself like that indolent snake Confronting that first wife with cancer’s last claim Just an overgrown garden snake parked upon our drive A brown arm’s-spread length of languid reptilian still A critter I’d never seen before or since that meeting Curled into a taunt that he hurled at my own girl Coiling tighter in delight: “The hour’s come for you!” She died soon after when the siege broke through And I never really heard the music until its absence Of delight in all creation—that’s how her voice fulfilled So what torched despair’s fingers until the grip gave out? One night in Harpoon Henry’s I kissed a pretty woman A nice, friendly girl I’d been working with for years Mouth-to-soul resuscitation seasoning bloodless sleep That kiss—alone, apart, about. A prelude to nothing Except the entirety of life. A kiss. That’s it. Interceding like prayer to caulk my brokenness Did I ever tell that girl what that kiss delivered? I now forget (surprise!) how she wriggled off the hook Can’t even recall the name, just drops of smiling eyes I am deaf, now. Blind. Can’t bend to tie my shoe A salty wind-whipped spray gentles this old wheeze Lets me taste that kiss once more and that is what I’ll ride You may release your servant, Lord. It is time for me to die.
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