The Duck that Passed Before Me
Poem for "After It's Gone" Challenge

I went outside today to smoke and watch the ducks.
Seven feet away from me, one sat isolated
and dry in the brush, a gang of flies swirling around her.
She pecked and darted her beak, swallowing
them whole. I walked over to her and
nudged her, as if the end had
feathers to fly.
Then I sat in front of her, batting the flies away,
as if it made any difference.
I ambivalently slid my shaky right hand
under this hen’s warm belly and lifted it about an inch.
Silence. What was I doing, tampering with wild frailty?
I'm so sorry. I felt ashamed.
You see, you were just too silent, unlike all those moments
you dazzled my ears with your mating calls
and food-begging quacks, wishing all the while
I could give you any morsel of my love,
for allowing me to gaze at you and your kin every day
and practice the deadly sin of envy.
She wouldn’t get up. She couldn’t walk.
And, oh, how I cursed this limiting dome of
fire and ice, of injured bones and webbed uselessness.
And the nadir of rotting inside plumage,
so close to edge. Which goes on? I wondered.
I called on Rumi to remind me how to wash
yourself of yourself, and let the world
know that nestling alone in the brush is an inch toward
salvation, toward counting, like Thoreau,
the tree rings in the cold and dying for it.
At last, I found the groundskeeper and asked him
to do something for this already-missed Muscovy.
Then, I numbly went to the pool and swam twenty laps,
grateful to be alive.
About the Creator
Paul Aaron Domenick
My writing speaks for itself, but in exchange with others, it speaks louder. Thank you for reading and responding to my stories. I enjoy reading yours, usually in the middle of the night :-)


Comments (2)
Ooh, all of that intertextuality!! Fantastic last line volta that LANDS.
Okay, Paul, I will admit that I like this version better. Sometimes, we hit publish, then another perspective or lost insight surfaces. 🌹