'DO YOU SAVE FOR A RAINY DAY?'
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I work
hard, pull in a little scratch, &
my laptop
dabbles in seppuku,
leaps from
a tall building,
overdoses
on a googolplex of giga-biturates.
Some sort
of protest, I think—against what,
I can’t
say, too numb from isolation panic
of data
loss & a bank statement
that reads
like binary code for a closed door.
It happens
often: money lands like a firefly in my palm,
then
glitters off to someone else’s fairy tale.
What good
is it trying to save
when
already it rains over long grass & rooftops,
stacks of
picnic paper plates,
the muddy
mausoleum
where
bodies of old raindrops rest?
I can’t
even research statistics of loss
with
computer in pieces down the road.
All I can
do is run my hands
through
the penny jar looking for a dime,
or collect
quarters fallen
to the
floorboards of my car
while
telling myself it’s raining again,
it’s
always raining somewhere in the world.
**
ACE BOGGESS is the author of two books of poetry: The Prisoners (Brick Road, 2014)
and The Beautiful Girl Whose Wish Was Not Fulfilled (Highwire, 2003). His
writing has appeared in Harvard Review, Mid-American Review, RATTLE, River
Styx, and many other journals. He lives in Charleston, West Virginia.