Pietà: The Morning Commute

Stephen Joseph
Nov 11, 2020

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Photo: By Cheryl Wee via Pexels

The crisp Fall promised a winter of icy silver.

I drove the length of a grey morning highway

Frantic with quiet traffic.

Along the border, the rough, wind-ground stone

Faded into a sea of moving texture

Blurred by my speed.

My eyes rested on a patch of dry weeds

Dusted with an early snow.

The fume-tinctured wind

Hissed serpent-like through the swaying stalks,

My spinning tires crackling on the pavement.

There, in the nest of the high grass,

A newborn fawn, sticky and helpless, squirmed,

Its birth suspended by a sudden crack,

Its form protruding from a stopped birth canal,

The closing warning of a truck’s horn

Still buzzing against its shattered ear-bones.

In that instant I saw the universe,

Limp in the arms of its mother,

And I sped by, numbed, on my commute,

The morning radio droning on

About nothing at all.

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Stephen Joseph
Stephen Joseph

Written by Stephen Joseph

Poetry and Pop Culture is the name of the game. Stephen is an author living in Rochester with his wife and two children.

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