POETRY
Anguish echoes in your stuttering voice,
drowned in drunk, scotch labels you
— a drunk, drunkard in a pit of loss.
There is no better way to label a man
as sad—dip in sober. You limp in glory.
Your wound bleeds with regret, in gush.
You stare into the mirror stained with
egg yolks. You see him, bent double
in the face of death. Your mind wanders
into this ugly memories when he modeled
his braveness for war. Muscles branded
with his mother's name, your wife.
How her warm body was buried in the
coldness of the steel. & your son, too,
brimmed into an empty bottle of beer.
You are still learning to look up the sky
for hope—carrying the neck of a pig.
Bloodshot. Your eyes, a sky of red contrail.
You fumbled your chest for joy, & you could
only grapple an ashtray. It is impossible to unlearn
grief. This, a revelation for fallen flowers.
Abdulkareem Abdulkareem, Frontier III, is a Nigerian writer and Linguist. His works appear/forthcoming on POETRY, West Trade Review, Off Topic Publishing, Aster Lit, Feral Poetry, Better Than Starbucks, The Shore Poetry, Brittle Paper, Claw and Blossom & elsewhere. He reads poetry for Frontier Poetry & Agbowó Magazine.
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