January 7, 2025

8 Poems by John Grey

8 Poems by John Grey

*Featured image courtesy of Tama66 on Pixabay*

Happy New Year! Let’s kick it off with a wonderful set of poems from longtime FC contributor, John Grey.

CAR NERD 

On his wall, he’s hung a poster 

of an automobile cutaway. 

It’s his version of Miss August in a swim-suit. 

The poster’s so detailed you 

can see the ball joint, the bushings, 

tie rod, disc brake rotor, universal joint. 

The tiny boxes with the arrows are unnecessary. 

He knows each part by name and function. 

I’m a book worm. I accept that. 

But he’s this other kind of worm, 

hatched in floor pans, fed on exhaust, 

dressed in STP. 

And, on his dresser, there’s this photograph 

of a bright red mustang circa 1965. 

One loving glance at it 

and he’s on the highway, 

foot to the floor, 

chewing up and spitting out the scenery. 

He’s still not old enough to drive. 

But he’s already over the speed limit. 

REGARDING THE END 

It’s not that I didn’t want to visit her 

in hospital – 

she is my aunt after all – 

and she is on the mend 

and will be home by next week 

but – and it’s a big but – 

it’s that walk through the wards 

that does me in. 

Look at the old man 

trudging behind his walker. 

And that chubby woman 

in her double-wide wheelchair. 

And the retired nun that Bessie 

shares a room with. 

She’s hooked up to a dozen tubes. 

She doesn’t stir. 

My wife barely speaks 

the whole time, 

not even when we sit bedside. 

All this talk of our future together 

and we’re surrounded by another version 

of the time to come. 

A nurse stops in. 

She smiles. 

But like an alligator smiles 

at a fawn 

while thinking, 

a year or two from now you’re mine. 

My aunt is cheery enough 

but she takes life in a downward direction 

just by being dressed in that light blue gown 

and tucked between the sheets 

with a vase of flowers on a table 

and a metal curtain track above her head. 

My wife says we should take life 

one day at a time. 

But doesn’t the end do that already. 

THE LAST DEATH CAMP SURVIVOR 

In her Brooklyn lebensraum, 

she putters about her apartment, 

cane in one hand, 

fresh flowers, from her window box, 

in the other. 

Only her bones know 

how old she is. 

Not the landlady. 

Not the other tenants. 

She admits to being 

“plenty ancient.” 

The family photograph sits  

on her tiny bedside table. 

It would be nowhere  

if the little girl in her mother’s arms 

had not survived.  

Occasional tears remind her 

that age is no cure.  

Her accent hasn’t changed so much 

from the day that she last saw them. 

She’ll go to her grave 

still hardening her w’s into v’s. 

If you want to hear her story, 

the eyes will have to do 

because the tongue won’t go there. 

Never married, 

no children, 

what will die with her 

is dead already. 

LOVE LETTER 

Dear river. 

You’re slow. 

You’re late arriving 

and you have no idea how late. 

In the lake’s glossy afternoon shimmer, 

there’s not much happening. 

Everything’s fixed in time and space. 

The surrounding rocks are dry. 

There’s very little lapping at the edges. 

Where’s all that snow melt 

I’ve heard so much about? 

The boats are moored and bored. 

They’d rather rot  

than putt-putt about in these measly depths. 

Sure, I saw the sign  

nailed to the tree. 

It said, “Climate’s not what it used to be.” 

But my expectations can’t read. 

So hear my voice. 

Get with the quick and gushing flow. 

Roll down the mountain  

furious and foaming. 

Waken this body of water  

from its rippling slumber. 

River, you’re like a lover to me. 

You bore my childhood. 

And not forgetting the twins – 

me at twenty,  

me at thirty. 

I feel as sad as a coffin. 

Don’t close the lid for good. 

Yours, with affection, 

John. 

THE CRUELEST 

If it wasn’t for spring, 

there’d be certainty. 

The cold would lead to more cold. 

The warm would be the forerunner of warmth. 

But the thermometer pulses like pain. 

And the wind just blows the way the wind blows. 

Spring is supposed to be about rebirth, 

but April drizzle kills my day out. 

It’s when the birds fly north 

and I long to fly south. 

And the Earth should be summer bound, 

but it makes too many bathroom stops. 

Sky is gray one moment, blue the next. 

Freeze thaws so the next freeze 

has something to work on. 

Like flowers, I redouble my efforts. 

Like flowers, I lose track of my intention. 

INSECT TRAPPED IN WINDOW 

You flap your wings, 

with a buzz I can’t hear, 

thumping against the glass 

that promises sky 

and the pane that offers 

the sanctity of my room. 

You’re a gnat, or a mite, 

too small, too insignificant, 

to warrant a name in my world, 

though even the tiniest of creatures 

conjures up a vision  

of sleeping sickness in west Africa 

or plagues in the Middle Ages. 

I could set you free, 

send you back out  

into the world. 

Or I could even  

follow up your liberation 

with a loud thwack  

from a rolled-up magazine. 

I seem to be in charge here. 

It’s a feeling I don’t get often 

so I could just thank you for that. 

HOLOCAUST CHILD. 

She was a child 

when there were no children. 

She was the youngest 

which just about made her the eldest, 

when- soldiers- came 

and took away all who could speak. 

She was passed around 
from neighbor to neighbor, 
a secret who cried 
uncontrollably at night, : 

who ransacked the patience of even the kindest. 

Somehow she survived 

which wasn’t done much in those days. 

And she grew up or, 

at least, her years on earth 

approached how old she felt. 

She was adopted after the war, 

moved with her new family 

to the States. 

She went to school, 

learned English. 

Her schoolmates were children. 

They mistook her for one. 

She worked as, a seamstress,  

married a much older man.  

They had two boys, two girls.  

She called them her children  

when any word would have done just as well. 

CLIFF DIVERS 

Divers wait in apron light, 

the tree-shrouded waiting room, 

before moving slowly  

to cliff-edge, grabbing 

a spare breath from somewhere, 

then plunging into the waters below. 

One after another, 

they soar downward 

into the deep pool, 

disappear in a sliced splash, 

before emerging in a cloud of bubbles, 

like shivering stars 

in a universe of cold surfaces. 


John Grey returns to share his writing on Fictional Cafe for the seventh time. His poetry is always welcome. John is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in New World Writing, North Dakota Quarterly and Tenth Muse. Latest books, “Between Two Fires”, “Covert” and  “Memory Outside The Head” are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in Haight-Ashbury Literary Journal, Birmingham Arts Journal, La Presa and Shot Glass Journal.

#death#john grey#longing#memories#poetry

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