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Poem – All I Had Was Gone (By R.T. Castleberry)

 

I take a 12 month chip,

a copy of The Iceman Cometh,

drape myself in Union blue,

cultivate a salesman’s grinning grip.

A Valley trip lies ahead,

road miles registered in a company car.

 

Spring becoming summer,

there’s a ghost in the garden,

a feral cat, sensuous in the drying grass.

I light a Tiparillo,

block walk the gentrified greenery–

open lawn, fenced lawn,

high oaks arcing the boulevard.

Black dirt dust from a truck farm town

cakes a two-toned Chrysler.

The 5 column church is silent

this Thursday afternoon.

Doors are locked. I tip my hat

to the service schedule

set and framed in quarry marble.

 

A Hickey-Freeman coat of summer weight wool

is thumbed over a shoulder.

There is no place left I seem to see.

Cigar ash flurries in the wind.

The Countess Mara silk stays tight,

tied with a 4 hand knot.

An oil derrick figure on tie clip and cufflinks

mark ten years service

 

Down a distant circular drive,

a lone boy pushes a bike.

He hops the seat, gains the pedals,

wings around the median

and is gone.

I’ll bring a survey team

to this memory next week.

 

 

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R.T. Castleberry’s work has appeared in Comstock Review, Green Mountains Review, Santa Fe Literary Review, The Alembic, Pacific Review, RiverSedge and Caveat Lector, among other journals. I am a co-founder of the Flying Dutchman Writers Troupe, co-editor/publisher of the poetry magazine Curbside Review, an assistant editor for Lily Poetry Review and Ardent My work has been featured in the anthologies Travois-An Anthology of Texas Poetry, TimeSlice and The Weight of Addition. My chapbook, Arriving At The Riverside, was published by Finishing Line Press in January, 2010. An e-book, Dialogue and Appetite, was published by Right Hand Pointing in May, 2011.