KWEE Liberian Literary Magazine Jan. Iss. Vol. 0115 May Issue Vol. 0515 | Page 48

Liberian Literary Magazine ’Twas Brillig Richard Wilson Moss Promoting Liberian Literature, Arts and Culture And said, you did alright, see you tomorrow But that night I died. With ruddy face and blue bow tie Waiting until it is time To dance around the maypole. 19 Moving Day Of this world I was dying Until the movers came And made me one of them They said, you work with us now Up front in the truck I rode With three of them, one was drunk Passing a flask, he said, you better Take a shot, its a long day And it was, we moved heavy But elegant things and then Broken down sofas, we moved The working class into Two bedroom, one bath homes And one place, the old one dead Left her things to charity Which we could not understand Victorian chairs and lamps, cobwebs On velvet drapes, the drunk fell asleep On a cherry and gold divan And when the sun fell down again The movers took me home And the foreman pulled me aside Slapped my back AnnBee Mayday If you scribble, turn the page Sun scrawls as it turns back Forever to the edge Scrape shoes on hot pavement Your stars are peeled away By lesser force, by the slightness Of surrounding darkness At the party of deep red plum Pin tails on donkeys Paper will bleed Carrot cake arrives, have some If you have scribbled, you have turned the page The guest book still unmarred, almost handsome I am shifting legs of dark corduroy 48 AnnBee from downstream visits And says the moon must be bigger For the tides seem stronger The seagulls are more stubborn On the pier, they won't fly off Until nearly upon them And at daybreak there are more strangers At the boat ramp Launching even stranger boats And they are cold to me Seem quite suspicious. Again I have to tell Miss AnnBee Those at the ramp are your good friends You have known them for years You have been in their boats The moon is the same, the tides unchanged The birds, as always, brave and unvexed And AnnBee looks at me Asking, are you confident all of that is true? copyright 2005 Richard Wilson Moss