Poetry from J.D. DeHart

Glossophobia

The flapping tongue
who stands at the front of the room
before all the Emerson roving eyes
trembles through articulation
being careful not to salivate.

Jab
 
I’m sorry to make
you cry when I told
that joke about
veterinarians.
It seems so silly now,
like most things do.
Other words I have forgotten
(like pessimism when I
was defensive, riddles
that drove my audience crazy,
the sly comments I would make
to not-so-deftly avoid insult)
but I remember the lovely
smile that became tears.
That day, we shuffled on our
way, but seven years later
I have to reconsider.  I have
to wonder what ever became
of the girl who was on the other
side of that jab.
Costumes
I’m still a comic book guy,
even in my late thirties.  It
started when I was barely
an embyro, I’m sure.
I used to fill empty pages
of notebooks with squares,
then infuse those spaces
with badly drawn characters.
Since adulthood, it’s still
about filling spaces.  Figuring
out the right images to
include.  I wanted to be a
superhero.  I’m something else,
I think.
No costume here, but I still
read about those who are
brave enough to put them on.
J.D. DeHart is also the author of the new poetry collection ‘Five-Year Journey.’ 

One thought on “Poetry from J.D. DeHart

Comments are closed.