Skip to content →

POEM: Morristown, Tennessee

Morristown, Tennessee

where the Hawaiian-shirted man
with receding gray hair
hands a cigarette to a young woman
in a Misfits t-shirt

there’s a black transvestite on a bench
swapping road stories
with a middle-aged white woman
cough shaking her Pepsi shirt
she’s headed for Arizona

a former pastor’s wife
(I did it for three years
can’t take it no more
that’s why I’m crazy now)
is hauling her three kids
home to Memphis

an old man with a twisted hand
leans his head toward the pavement
smokes and stares at the pristine white socks
poking out of his dirty work boots

there’s a little person
(or a teenaged boy who’s seen too much)
wearing a black shirt with a smiling grim reaper
he hugs two young children on the sidewalk

the bus driver
— tall, prim, bald —
brought a bag of dog treats
all the way from Virginia
for the two terriers who live at the station
he turns away, smiling

this bootleg bus station
is run by an elderly couple
man in red suspenders
with carefully matched trucker cap
squat woman in an oversize shirt

that’s what there was to see
this June afternoon
in Morristown, Tennessee

16 June 2012
Morristown, TN

Published in My poems Poetry

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.