Showing posts with label funny death poem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label funny death poem. Show all posts

Thursday, June 21, 2018

"My Friends Don't Get Buried" Wonderful Poem by Edward Hirsch





The New Yorker

My Friends Don’t Get Buried


Audio: Read by the author.
My friends don’t get buried
in cemeteries anymore, their wives
can’t stand the sadness
of funerals, the spectacle
of wreaths and prayers, tear-soaked
speeches delivered from the altar,
all those lies and encomiums,
the suffocating smell of flowers
filling everything.
No more undertakers in black suits
clutching handkerchiefs,
old buddies weeping in corners,
telling off-color stories, nipping shots,
no more covered mirrors,
black dresses, skullcaps and crucifixes.
Sometimes it takes me a year or two
to get out to the back yard in Sheffield
or Fresno, those tall ashes scattered
under a tree somewhere in a park
somewhere in New Jersey.
I am a delinquent mourner
stepping on pinecones, forgetting to pray.
But the mourning goes on anyway
because my friends keep dying
without a schedule,
without even a funeral,
while the silence
drums us from the other side,
the suffocating smell of flowers
fills everything, always,
the darkness grows warmer, then colder,
I just have to lie down on the grass
and press my mouth to the earth
to call them
so they would answer.
  • Edward Hirsch is the author of, most recently, the book “Gabriel: A Poem.”

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

My Gravestone Inscription, in 5 Words !! per The Twitter Poet, Brian Bilston

brianbilson.com, The Twitter Poet:


MY GRAVESTONE IN FIVE WORDS


And here’s another of my “poems”, imagined by @new_toon
The challenge here was to think of what you might have inscribed on your gravestone in five words.
  

Monday, August 8, 2016

At the Sunny Ridge Retirement Center by Peg Bresnahan/POEM - Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keillor, Saturday, August 6, 2016

Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keillor, August 6, 2016. Saturday:


At the Sunny Ridge Retirement Center

During Harriet’s memorial service,
Frances leaned, put her head
on my shoulder and died—quietly
as if she didn’t want to interrupt
Harriet’s program.
The minister didn’t see us,
no one knew except me. At the piano,
Mary played the introduction
to Going Home. Everyone thumbed
their hymnals for page two hundred forty-three.
I didn’t know what to do, since Frances
still looked like Frances, only not quite
and she was ninety-five. I put my arm
around her so she wouldn’t fall
and waited for someone to notice.
Through the French doors
finches squabbled at the bird feeder.
The squirrel we call Rocky
contemplated his next move.
A laundry truck rolled by.
I looked down at Frances’ navy blue crocs,
the ones she claimed felt so much
like bedroom slippers
she could wear them anywhere.
“At the Sunny Ridge Retirement Center” by Peg Bresnahan from In a Country None of Us Called Home. © Press 53, 2014. Reprinted with permission.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

"Posthumous" Poem by Jean Nordhaus

Poetry FoundationPoem of the Day

3 / 6 / 2014

Poem of the Day: Posthumous

BY JEAN NORDHAUS
Would it surprise you to learn
that years beyond your longest winter
you still get letters from your bank, your old
philanthropies, cold flakes drifting
through the mail-slot with your name?
Though it's been a long time since your face
interrupted the light in my door-frame,
and the last tremblings of your voice
have drained from my telephone wire,
from the lists of the likely, your name
is not missing. It circles in the shadow-world
of the machines, a wind-blown ghost. For generosity
will be exalted, and good credit
outlasts death. Caribbean cruises, recipes,
low-interest loans. For you who asked
so much of life, who lived acutely
even in duress, the brimming world
awaits your signature. Cancer and heart disease
are still counting on you for a cure.
B'nai Brith numbers you among the blessed.
They miss you. They want you back.

Source: Poetry (February 1999).

JEAN NORDHAUS