Thursday, December 5, 2024

GAS Featured Poet: Craig Kirchner


 Craig Kirchner is retired, and thinks of poetry as hobo art. He loves the aesthetics of the paper and pen, has had two poems nominated for the Pushcart, and has a book of poetry, Roomful of NavelsAfter a hiatus he was recently published in Decadent Review, Hamilton Stone Review, Wise Owl, Chiron Review, Dark Winter, Spillwords, Fairfield Scribe, Unlikely Stories, The Main Street Rag and several dozen others. 


 Passed

 

 

We rushed up from Jacksonville,

cop in Emporia said 95

was not the speed limit, 

said I was a threat on the road,

after he had driven across the median 

with a spotlight in my eyes.

My Dad had gotten a ticket in Emporia.

 

4 AM, we got there

he was on a morphine drip.

Mom let me spend some time alone,

I don’t know if he could hear me,

but I told him the story about the ticket,

I thought he smiled,

and then he was gone.

 

Hurricane Floyd made a funeral

a challenge, carrying the coffin

could have been a disaster.

They offered to postpone, Rofie said no.

I threw my suit away, when it was over,

my thought was he wouldn’t 

have had it any other way.

 

Remembering him years later,

is like wandering empty, endless doors

of no hellos, good-byes.

The holidays seem haunted with hurricane 

savagery, reminiscent of his sense of humor.

The doorbell rings, no one’s there,

ever since Dad died.

 

 

 

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