Two poems from hobo James H. Duncan.
Reflections
– on mirrors
now I pace the highway like a real ghost might
tipping the flask to my lips one last time
a quick shot of relief and then down into drive,
a shift, a release of the wheel
in the dark I cannot tell how the bed becomes a highway slab
my eyes never know, they flutter under skin
paper thin to the moon, reflecting now against my
pavement blood, remembering my
knees against the backs of your long gone legs
wishing for reflection in the traffic headlight drone
JD
12 gauges of remorse
– on When We Two Parted
silence stains the lonely shoes
worn before the soul fell through
cat’s eye wallpaper, honest, peeling,
ever so slight of hand
a flick of the belt and a hush
from the stair, as the moon hides beyond
candle-lit nebulous reasons fly
from the roof into tomorrow’s tomorrow
reality is a loaded shotgun starry
night, hung beside the mirror on the wall
triggers painted red and a cat’s eye reeling,
ever so slight of hand
JD
Author Biography
James H Duncan is a tramp, a gentleman, a poet, a dreamer, a lonely fellow, always hopeful of romance and adventure. The editor of Hobo Camp Review, James considers himself a student of the road, where you’ll find him in late-night diners, local dive bars, and wandering train station platforms minding his own business. Apt, Red Fez, Reed Magazine, Slipstream, Poetry Salzburg Review, and The Battered Suitcase, among many others, have welcomed his work. More here.
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