When
When
I wonder what time of the day I’ll die?
At dawn, drifting off to soaring birdsong
enveloping a slowly lighting sky?
Elevenses? A digestive, your strong
coffee brewing, the paper read as I,
frightened and fearful beg you, don’t be long.
Over lunch? My tuna melt half eaten
I gasp for air and fumble, my head flops
exhausted of life, my body beaten.
During my siesta at four o’clock?
My Kindle on and what I was reading
safely locked where, on the sofa, it dropped.
Evening? With my headphones on reflecting
on the past, moments won or lost: how far
we’ve come. So much goodness to recollect.
Or in my bed at night? The moon and stars
indifferent to my passing or the speck
of dust of who I was or who we are.
Or something brutal I didn’t expect.
keith jeffries
Thu 22nd Jun 2023 19:04
I enjoyed this poem as I suppose the thought of death, the time and place we ponder. It is not the venue which I think about, it is how. I would prefer to go in a blinding flash, barely conscious of what was taking place.
Thank you for this,
Keith