Feeling Sorry for Myself
I start with a groan,
swelling to a moan,
rising to a keen, ascending
to a shriek that tapers
off in a thin wail.
I hug myself and, whimpering,
rock back and forth on
my heels.
No one has ever known such sadness.
No one can grasp how I
feel.
I smash an egg over each
eye.
I smear my face with coal and pepper.
I wear a paper bag soaked
through
with spoiled watermelon and pork grease.
I shred my happy past -
my books,
pictures, and poems, published or not.
I'll never fly fish
again.
I'll never make love again.
I'll never sit outside and watch night
stretch its starry tent over the
sky.
There will be no more metaphors.
I am more sorrowful than a
sorrowing man.
Life has no more meaning to me
than a life without
meaning.
My heart slows. My blood
congeals
to brown, vein-clogging mush.
My stomach goes on strike; my
colon
bars its door. People assume
I'm terminal. They imagine what
would make them feel the way I look,
and project their paltry problems
onto me.
As if they could fathom my
misery
by waterwinging over its abyss!
My pain is too heavy to lift,
too vast to measure, too ineffable to name,
and incalculably too
precious to share.
I dig my grave in a landfill, and topple in.
I rub
dirt and dog droppings in my hair.
I've sunk so low its funny;
so I start to giggle.
Then to chortle. Then to roar. Mothers
clutch
their bleating kids, and rush away.
Gangbangers dash to the far side of the
street.
I crawl out of my grave, strip, and shower
with a gunk-filled
water hose.
I shake and shiver, grinning, in the filthy air.
~ Charles Harper Webb
~
(Tulip farms and leper colonies:
poems)
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