BY Roger Barbee
A Life
All left of our boyhood friendship
is this folded obituary clipped from the newspaper.
It tells of your thirty-three years in the mill,
memberships in a lodge and Baptist church,
and it list names of immediate family.
Not mentioned are
our long bicycle rides to Coddle Creek
taken to escape summer heat
under its canopy of wet green
wading through the water and day;
nor does it mention
those early Sunday mornings
when we sped through dark, town streets
racing to circles of yellow light
as you helped me deliver papers
to sleeping customers;
or the way you would appear at our door,
a wrinkled shirt flung over one shoulder
asking for a sister and iron
because your masculine house had neither.
It states your given name that we ignored
in favor of your favorite wrestler’s,
and it gives your dates on earth,
but omits that you were left handed,
had a lop-sided grin of a thousand suns,
and your pearl to the world-a kind spirit.
After all, it is only a piece of newsprint,
not a life,
like yours.
For William Query, whom we called Moto