October 19th, 2009

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Mark Terrill

A POEM FOR UNCERTAINTIES

I gave the waitress in the café a fifty & she gave me my change got sidetracked
& left the fifty on the counter all alone with me & my conscience & I had to
dig so deep down into my frail moral fiber that it hurt & I came back up
emboldened with a spontaneous resolution to just do good & motioned toward
the fifty & the waitress looked down & shook her head & smiled & picked up
the money & put it away & then out on the street I told you what happened
that I almost earned us an extra fifty euros which we certainly could have used
but instead got caught up in a tangle of virtue & you said that I’d done the right
thing & that good things would come my way & I said yeah but you have to
take them for the interchange to be complete & we laughed & walked on down
the sidewalk & suddenly I saw the whole world as a giant garden of crass uncertainties
with a knot where my heart used to be & coffee & beer where the
blood used to flow & the wavering contingencies stacked up end to end reaching
up past the highest tower of cumulus hovering above the vast city of
Hamburg & it scared me but I got brave & went on.

from Rattle #27, Summer 2007

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You are currently reading “A Poem for Uncertainties” by Mark Terrill at Rattle: Poetry for the 21st Century.

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