The Man Who Was Never a Father
A Reflection on Absence and Unspoken Legacies

Late on rent,
poring over a breath
meant to be a hiccup.
Cold coffee drapes from a finger,
a cigarette hisses,
I have no master.
—
A pencil burns itself whole,
searching for a word
that can hold both graphite and spite,
but no rooster crows its arrival.
—
His gadget slips from its not-summer dress,
wades into what should be a river—
but the Irishmen took the current,
the peonies never protested.
—
So he climbs inside the empty skin
of wife, of daughter,
murmurs:
Without you, without you, without you, without you,
there would be no firecracker grins.
—
And he feels it—
where bones once stood,
before that November
when the radio shattered
against parking meters,
the garage a wedding cake
frozen in abandonment,
and he took the gasp.
About the Creator
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Comments (6)
Fantastic ✍️♦️♦️♦️♦️
So sad. Powerful words and emotions in poetry.❤️
Wow, Jason - this is outstanding! There are so many brilliant lines in this.
It s a very feeling full poets,amazing
This is so sad no one not even a father should feel this way. Good job,
Good work 👏