Bill Alton

Poetry


Dad’s Grief

My folks’ closet is crazy with coats and clothes hung like lonely hides waiting for someone to pull them on again.

Secrets sit in the corners, up on the shelves.

My dad’s old uniform is huge. The sleeves drop over my hands. The weight of it makes me important.

The war sits in his face, the crawling around in the mud and constant shit. Guys weeks dead, bloated, skins split, their innards a meal for the ants and monkeys.

We found a pit once. Smelled like barbeque.

Something’s gone out of him.

He closes the door and stays there until morning.

Published by Bill, on August 22nd, 2009 at 12:21 pm. Filled under: Uncategorized Tags: , , , , No Comments

Things My Dad Did

Drinking again. Dad tries on an Irish brogue. It doesn’t fit.
I built that mountain there.
He pours his stories in my ears.
I dug this river, pissed in it to get the water going.
Some nights he sings. Darling Billy. Blow the Man Down.
Light hangs shadows on his face.
Sleep comes on the tail of his voice.

Published by Bill, on August 1st, 2009 at 7:41 pm. Filled under: Uncategorized Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , No Comments