| Willie James King is a poet, educator, and actor who lives in Montgomery, Alabama. Visit his website at williejamesking.com. Flounder
I was not drinking the night I leaned in- to our imagined banister, spooning jelly from a jar; we’d come into such frigid weather, but I did not know that far. At the top of the Stairs
What little we discern from Lear’s rejections of the Fool’s jests might be applied to our own affairs: when we think we have the last rung in sight, another flight’s at the top of the stairs. This Is Grief Ah, Michael, as a poet I suspect I am suppose to pen something about you this morning. Here in Montgomery, it’s rain- ing; the wind has lost its will; there are no yellow bolts of lightning, or any loud thunder-claps, like a brassy cymbal crash to announce your absence. That is for grandeur, this is grief. Yet, you left all of these heartfelt songs that almost con- sole us, now that you’ve gone. I Can’t help but look back on a fall day much like this, it was on a Friday, friends goaded me toward our gym’s auditorium, all trying to prepare me for what I was about to hear, a boy’s voice soulful as an angel’s whaling who's sadden, sassy in the same, all that ease at which you hit those high notes, even our teacher peered at those squealers, nervous talkers and held a silencing finger to her lips to kindly urge us Please! Michael, yours was the magic we needed man, having just months before been deprived of our good Prophet, Martin Luther King. I was also young, and I both heard and knew at once, it was tragic being black and gifted, enormously packed and rapt with ethereal talent as so often you shared with all, on stage and in life; you tried to warn us in each song. It Hasn't Got a Chance
The dog, with an albino eye, just appeared out of thin air at a time when I didn’t need and added yelp in the form of another dog to feed, I let it stay. I was stunned and surprised to find It fetched even so, it wasn’t expected, as the dogs raised in my backyard couldn’t be depended on to do. They only obeyed when there was a biscuit, or a bone about to be given them immediately after the doing. Suddenly there appeared this fox who had an insatiable appetite for my fowl, who found pleasure and ease in walking off with its carefully chosen pick. The dogs I felt obli- gated to merely gazed, as if to say, No need to fuss, it didn’t come for us. But the intruder with that albino eye shored up to prove it had fight, much pluck and worth when it tore into the fox and bit a plug out of its roguish courage kept its nose to its heels, as with amazement, the fox raced like a wind-blown blaze toward the forest. Now, the other dogs keep an eye on my one-eyed hero, to grab for scraps it leaves. They seem far more eager and more watchful than ever before. And I am certain that fox knows, as well as its thieving clan, it hasn't got a chance. |