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richcmather

First Sentence

By Richard Mather



I cannot remember my first word,

But I do recall my first sentence:

Cribbed in a box with the lid on,

Kept under house arrest

By a familial jailer.

Sheets were hot wet prisons.


Hands larger than God

Executed your angry reprisals.

I was moon-stricken, heart-bitten

By your iceberg pettiness,

And your lazy shameful fumblings.

I could not win as you raged like some fallen idol.


Verbal bullets pierced the sweating air

When hard white fingers tore my skin

And pulled at my hair.

No night was safe from your hooks

Or sour tongue.


You were the immovable statue

And your new husband a grey shadow

Flat and cringing,

Cowering like a frightened schoolboy

Beneath the blackboard.


A litany of orders diminished us.

We sang distant tiny echoes

Of your merciless overture.

You always were the one

With the chalk in your hand.


The strings snapped from your fingers,

Unleashing a tentacled monster

Lavishing its poison over gaunt faces.

You should have finished me

Before I got you.


Like a wounded animal grasping

At its half-devoured prey

You shrank in the doorway,

Hissing and spitting as I gathered up

The bags and clothes that littered the garden.

I had to escape, they tell me.

I had to escape.


My departure was almost a calling.

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