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| SICK There is no silence like a hospital room at night. This when the other six beds were empty and I Was barely eleven, with an IV in my arm and The soft light of the city through the louvered blinds, The occasional truck vibration in the rain-washed streets, The weak light in the polished hall, my nurse call button Glowing like a single lidless eye, like a handless watch Telling me that no one would come till dawn. I longed to buzz a nurse just to hear a voice, But was far too polite a kid to make any trouble. Besides, I knew the night nurse was cold mortuary stone And wouldn't come unless I rang for her, and then Her voice would only hurt as when I told her of The plastic model tugboat my dad might bring me, And she, "It'll have to be disinfected and will melt." I had lain in that bed for over two weeks, Seeing only eyes surrounded by white cloth; They explained to me that one more disease Coupled to my four would be one too many. So I lay very still, because I was very weak, Hating the dull ache of the IV needle in my vein. But there was something lovely in that silence. Even now I feel the surrender of my frail body Under the clean white cotton, listening to the Tiniest sounds as a conductor to his orchestra. I tried not to move, not to swallow, not to breathe. A place where aloneness is a friend, a gust of rain Blown against the thermopane, a violin solo. |
Thirst and Consequences © 2002 by Eric Green
Published by Doctor True House Press
All rights reserved.