Catch

I’d spent the morning trying

to sketch a cat, but in the dream

that night was a different cat, paw

caught in its collar. When I woke,

because I am a poet I wrote, 

the cat has a poem caught in its collar.

Collar suggesting the yoke of domesticity.

Cat sharing the first syllable of my own name.

In the dream the cat was black and white—

I’m a Libra—and while the situation

was clear and my helping instinct strong,

I hesitated, having always both loved and feared

the unpredictable animal of my own nature.

I’d wanted to sketch a cat not catch it,

to capture in graphite its curves and markings

not hold its creaturely panic in my arms.

When I freed the paw, what I felt was

the poem drawn from my body by its claws.

Roses

The roses are sick but bud anyway on defoliated stems.

They won’t last long.

Only every other button needs to know,

I mean no one does,

as I am alone

and neither hot nor cold

with no corporeal desire except to live in peace.

Murders everywhere.

And though they bloom with abandon this spring 

the poppies are not a symbol because blood is not.

I am trying very hard not

to wish harm on those who profit from others’ losses

as if they held doctorates in money and still don’t know what blood costs. 

The roses were planted with fish heads, 

their eyes surprised by soil as it fell. I turned my eyes away

again and again. To classrooms, bedrooms, galleries, and bone rooms. 

The inscription above the skeleton reads:

I was once what you are and what I am you will also be.

The dead are not a symbol. The roses are not

because our lives are not.

Hospice

The oxygen is louder than you think breath should be.

And the figure on the bed appears more and less

Like themself, as those hovering near urge upon 

The dying one both more life and easeful passage,

Slipping into past tense as they speak, trying

On loss like a parent’s shoes. While the parent, without

Need of shoes, might say if they spoke, Keep them,

They fit you well.

John Doe
Poet, Independent Writer
IN CONVERSATION WITH
Kathy Fagan