May 14th poem: Classic Sinatra

May 14th poem: Classic Sinatra

May 14, 2024

Classic Sinatra

Frank died the same day

that Mom did, their essence

mingling with the marrow

of others meeting their own demise.

Sinatra may have been singing.

Mom may have been humming along.

The slaughterhouse barely opened —

its barn-red paint flaking in the sunlight;

decay and deterioration running rampant

among the bodies of those left behind.

Their rotting wood floors no longer holding

the necessary weight to carry on.

Medications bulldoze and demolish any scant

health left, their bodies razed like aged sheds

in abandoned fields, slow-dance

with dying, no longer trying to pilfer

another long day — butchered and broken

into mingled segments of back story.

I prefer to think that Mom and Frank

danced the night away in that old barn.

There might have been dragonflies.

The sun may have been shining.

by Annette Gagliardi

Published in Pasque Petals, Spring 2022, South Dakota State Poetry Society.

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