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UNDERGROUND VOICES: POETRY
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LOWELL JAEGER Confessions I once shoplifted a tin of Vienna sausages. Crouched in the aisle as if to study the syllables of preservatives, tore off the lid, pulled out a wiener and sucked it down. I've cheated on exams. Made love to foldouts. Walked my paper route in a snowstorm after dark, so I could steal down a particular alley where through her gauze curtains, a lady lounged with her nightgown undone. I've thrown sticks at stray dogs. Ignored the cat scratching to come inside. Even in the rain. Sat for idle hours in front of the TV, and not two feet away the philodendrons for lack of a glass of water gasped and expired. So many excuses I've concocted to get by. Called in sick when I was not. Grabbed credit for happy accidents I had no hand in. Pointed fingers to pin the innocent with crimes unmistakably mine. I have failed to learn from grievous error. Repeated gossip. Invented gossip. Held hands in a circle of friends to rejoice over the misfortune of strangers. Pushed over tombstones. Danced the devil's jig. Once, when I was barely old enough to walk home on my own, I hid behind an abandoned garage. Counted sixteen windows. Needed only four handfuls of stones to break every one. "Confessions" by Lowell Jaeger, from We. © Main Street Rag Publishing Company, 2010. Reprinted with permission. |
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