Samuel John Hazo
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Samuel John Hazo
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Biography
Curriculum Vitae
International Poetry Forum
Selected Poetry
Books
Media
Videos
Gallery
Contact
GOD’S GIFT TO ME
My dearest Mary Anne,
I’m no more reconciled
than I was three months ago.
You’re everywhere I look—
from raincoats hangared
in a closet to framed photographs
to car keys for a car
you never drove.
I sleep
now on your side of the bed.
It helps, but still I wake
to find few public men
or women worthy of respect,
no shortage of military deaths
bartered for affluence, no dearth
of voters who believe that pistols
holstered at the hip define
democracy.
To say that other
men have lost their wives
is no relief.
Devastation
stays particular and merciless
if shared or not.
Longevity
offers nothing but more
of the same or worse…
I miss
your face, your voice, your calm
defiance in your final months,
your last six words that will be
mine alone forever.
Darling,
you were my life as surely
as you are my life today
and will be always.
We’re close
as ever now but differently.
“Why do we have to die?”
you asked.
I had no answer.
My answer now is rage
and tears that sentence death
to death each day I wake
without but always with you.
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