Susan Cossette: “Waiting for Cremation”

Waiting for Cremation


There is no perfection in death.

This is not the final picture of me,
the Greek chorus that was my family,
gazing down, hissing—

adulteress, lousy mother, heretic.

False poses, opaque makeup,
stiff hands coaxed loose by the mortician,
pink rosary beads strung in mute prayer
through pale wax fingers.

Florid lilies and heaps of hydrangeas
stand watch, alongside cheerful tulips.

I am visited, prayed over.
My head propped on a satin pillow,
the double chins more prominent,
the red lips stitched shut.

This is what everyone wanted.
I am finally mute.

Son, I tell you this while I still breathe--

Place the rough grey gravel shards of me
into a hummingbird-adorned urn,
into the damp warm earth, alongside my mother.

About the Author: Susan Cossette lives and writes in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Author of Peggy Sue Messed Up, she is a recipient of the University of Connecticut’s Wallace Stevens Poetry Prize. A two-time Pushcart Prize nominee, her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Rust and MothThe New York QuarterlyONE ART, As it Ought to Be, Anti-Heroin Chic, Crow & Cross Keys, The Eunoia Review, and in the anthologies Fast Fallen Women (Woodhall Press) and Tuesdays at Curley’s (Yuganta Press).

Image Credit: John Rubens Smith “Two ornamental urns” Public domain image courtesy of the Library of Congress

John Dorsey: “On the Prospect of Dying in December”

On the Prospect of Dying in December

not the end of the year
but maybe the end of your life
& you don’t know 
if you should buy another calendar
you didn’t buy the one you have now
given away by the local bank
curling at the bottom 
after an already brutal summer
you think about the winter of 1996
just before your grandfather 
closed his eyes one last time
while smiling 
knowing the battle 
was almost over
thinking about when you sold calendars 
over the holidays for the local bookstore
mostly of swimsuit models 
who are grandmothers now
& kittens that are long dead
& butterflies that have flown away
& you wonder 
how long it will be for you
on an unusually cool august morning
waiting for your ride

it won’t be long now.

About the Author: John Dorsey is the former poet laureate of Belle, Missouri and the author of Pocatello Wildflower. He may be reached at archerevans@yahoo.com.

Image Credit: Harris & Ewing “Washington Snow Scenes” (1924) Public domain image courtesy of the Library of Congress

Agnes Vojta: “The Pope Coffin”

The Pope Coffin

I do not know whether dad
believed in heaven.
He had a sense for the sacred.
Sometimes all you see is the fruit;
the root remains secret.

My father never discussed death,
except to say he wanted a coffin
like Pope John Paul II: clear
lines, no frivolous embellishments –
an architect’s choice.

The minister spoke about the city-to-come,
solemn and hopeful, consoling
without the saccharine promises
dad would have hated. One must leave
space for uncertainty.

About the Author: Agnes Vojta grew up in Germany and now lives in Rolla, Missouri where she teaches physics at Missouri S&T and hikes the Ozarks. She is the author of Porous Land, The Eden of Perhaps, and A Coracle for Dreams, all published by Spartan Press. Most recently, she has been collaborating with eight other poets on the book Wild Muse: Ozarks Nature Poetry (Cornerpost Press, 2022.) Her poems have appeared in a variety of magazines; you can read some of them on her website agnesvojta.com.

Image Credit: Jules-Edmond-Charles Lachaise “Design for a ceiling with trompe l’oeil balustrade and sky” Public domain image courtesy of Artvee