Poetry from John Dorsey

All Afternoon Long

past wordless fields

of music

& ruined barns

a tattered necktie

& a drawing of young trees

he knew every crazy road

from his favorite chair.

My Father’s God

blotted out the sun

the wind was perfect

the autumn world

marveled at me

in my one good suit.

A Desperate Neighborhood

at heart

america

is long mornings

with obvious motives

alone & delicate

silent hillsides of red poppies

poor sons & dreadful movies.

John Dorsey is the former Poet Laureate of Belle, MO. He is the author of several collections of poetry, including Which Way to the River: Selected Poems: 2016-2020 (OAC Books, 2020), Sundown at the Redneck Carnival, (Spartan Press, 2022, Pocatello Wildflower, (Crisis Chronicles Press, 2023) and Dead Photographs, (Stubborn Mule Press, 2024). He may be reached at archerevans@yahoo.com.

3 thoughts on “Poetry from John Dorsey

  1. a Desperate Neighborhood seems all too real. The rockets were red gleaming over the trees and the houses in the neighborhood all night into the early evening. And our city was lucky compared to the capital city where teenagers with flare guns and real guns alternately started row house fires and saw four innocent bystanders shot on their way home, along with some 50,000 other people, from annual Empire Plaza fireworks display. And that was just the beginning….thanks for these poems, John

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