Issue 86

Elegy for 1990

[]

A murder of five echoed the muddy rush
refusing my skinny oak arms, pop cans 
and cardboard scarves scolding my hand. 
A barge chewed the center current, a brown 
rat piloting an empty gallon jug in its wake. 
I asked the crows, Why am I here? Five eyes 
rolled north as the rat tacked the bend, two
nude men on the west bank holding hands
and a spittoon, a third waving his ballcap 
like a lighthouse beam I’d dreamed before 
my uncle’s truck caressed the cliff, the river
unwilling to touch him too, yellow pansies
exciting the hillside he descended. A crow
set a petal on the rock beside me and waited. 



Ben Kline (he/him/his) lives in Cincinnati, Ohio. Author of the chapbooks Sagittarius A* and Dead Uncles, host of Poetry Afield and Poetry Stacked, Ben is a poet and storyteller whose work appears in bedfellows magazine, Pangyrus Lit, South Carolina Review, Pigeon Pages, Poetry, Southeast Review, Autofocus, fourteen poems, and many other publications.





Return to Top of Page