The Insulted Clock

The insulted clock
sees couples kissing
and stews, ticking indignantly
as they stop time.

What, she says,
is the point of me
when it’s so easy
to forget me?

Come on, she says
to one pair — two short women
wrapped in each other,
hands in each other’s hair.

Come on, get it over with,
get back to being able to hear me.
You can’t get away with eternity
forever,

no matter how good it feels.
I want to get my own hands on you
and remind you that no moment
should be immortalized

above any other.  Love me
and my insistence on forward
and direction and beginning
and ending.  It’s the best advisor

we have, that knowledge
of short time.  You’re messing
that up with love, pleasure,
with your deafness to me. 

Keep this up too long
and when you do come around
I’ll hurt you more than I want to,
and it’s nothing you’ll get over soon. 

About Tony Brown

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A poet with a history in slam, lots of publications; my personal poetry and a little bit of daily life and opinions. Read the page called "About..." for the details. View all posts by Tony Brown

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