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Showing posts with label Richard LeDue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard LeDue. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2025

New poems: Richard LeDue




My Ten Count


My ten count sometimes lasted

two days, as I sweated defeat

through my underwear,

and heard counting in the voices

of co-workers, bus drivers, strangers

in love with the victory of silence.

The courage easier years ago

to fake, using a half empty bottle

of whisky to prop myself up,

until the hangover the next day

knocked me down like a left hook

turning my soul into glass.





Another Reluctant Spring


Your death comes back to life

to haunt me at 2 PM,

when the snow melts

just like it does every year,

and I want to say this is faith,

proving god believes in us,

but it leaves me feeling more alone,

more certain in my own uncertainty,

as my memory tries its damnedest

to unremember the cancer

stealing your voice away,

until it came back today

as ghostly footsteps

trapped

in the attic of my mind.





The Struggle Against Silence


Bach’s music is heavy with sadness,

like someone who has to believe in god

in order for the world to make sense,

while Beethoven is the thunder

from angels bowling away

another summer night,

and Bukowski the static stained radio,

relishing classical composers at 1 AM,

until the last wine bottle emptied.





Sane as an Egg


chewed with an open mouth in the morning,

while in the garbage can,

the broken shell sits;

any sound it had made lost

to the same silence we let say goodnight to us

or mumble the alarm clock’s noise

after hitting snooze for the third or fourth time.

Yesterday’s deja vu easily forgotten,

until the shower sings the same song

and the coffee left to cool too long again,

making a desire for madness, that our ancestors

perfected by letting it stay unspoken,

the best satisfaction we can have.





Any Corpse Could be a Genius


A dead name might find life

on a tombstone,

like a street people remember

because there was a brothel

or a house famous enough

to have ghosts,

if they’re lucky.

Of course, there’s grey hair

first, sore backs

that mean nothing, doctors

lecturing about blood pressure,

and empty bottles

filled without anyone noticing

pieces of a soul.





A Morning Person Lazarus


The sunlight at 7:34 AM is

potent as the first glass of whisky,

except it’s been six months

since my last drink,

and the ice in my freezer

more frozen than ever,

but no one seems to care

about how I don’t squint

at the morning sun now;

a cloudy confirmation

that life has meaning beyond

a hangover hanging from another,

or that god might be

one more set of eyes

who believed my smile never died.




Richard LeDue lives in Norway House, Manitoba, Canada. He has published both online and in print. He is the author of ten books of poetry. His latest book, 'Sometimes, It Isn't Much' was released by Alien Buddha Books in February 2024.


Find more of his work on Bold Monkey Review here: 

https://georgedanderson.blogspot.com/2024/05/featuring-richard-ledue.html

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Featuring Richard LeDue



Nice and Tidy


Minutes crawling by like ants,

who probably believe the bottom of your foot

is the devil and your kid's cookie crumbs

god, but eventually the floors will be barren,

well swept and clean enough

to fool the world

into thinking you never made a mess,

or maybe barely even existed.




The Writer's Dream


The truest gamble is getting out of bed

each morning, taking part in the slow death race

we call rush hour, only to find the finish line

is always changing,

until defeat arrives like fresh sheets

on a hospital bed,

but there are ways to win,

like refusing the surrender a Saturday night

to silence and allowing a dead singer

life again in between whisky coloured wagers

that are the safest bets

or chasing the writer's dream,

while others sleepwalk through Netflix,

sensible bed times, keeping track of fibre

in their diets, worrying about blue chip stocks,

succeeding at a job that will kick them

to retirement like they're a half deflated football

doomed to to a thrift store afterlife.




Art Among CGI Explosions


Hundreds of millions of dollars baptize

another Hollywood movie,

while I shortchange myself by being

on hold for an hour,

comparing tenants insurance

to save a couple of hundred of dollars,

and the hold music started to remind of death

breathing hard on the end of an unlisted number,

so I hung up.

My failure small next to a brilliant director,

who was important enough to sell out,

to talk of art among CGI explosions

as I lie in bed, blue as a grey sky,

knowing my own story

wouldn't even warrant practical effects.




Neither Sacred Nor Sacrilegious


Had a good night yesterday,

wrote three poems,

however, tonight I had an invasion of bugs,

tiny ones all over my kitchen floor.

They were small as worries

we forget years later,

yet as I squashed them,

I felt defeated

because I had surrendered my inspiration

to creatures who probably believe crumbs

god's favour and my hands heavenly wrath,

only to leave me in my own purgatory

searching for words, neither sacred nor sacrilegious,

but the closest I'll ever get to salvation.




Not Much of a Memory


Over twenty years ago,

we went to this party up the road

from my friend's house,

which was down the road from a cemetery,

and I drank enough beer

to safely say I don't remember being there,

but I never forgot the walk back at 5 AM.

My friend and I coated in dawn's light

like we were two drunk angels,

only to know for sure now

that I have no idea what we talked about

or why went at all.




The Beauty of It All


Crows atop of telephone lines

watch like angels who chose to leave heaven

and my fingers hide in pockets,

as if they were earthworms

waiting for the preacher's voice.


The twilight sky a rose always

just out of touch.


The beauty of it all a spiritual experience

akin to a heart attack kicking you

out of your body, only to hear your doctor

complain about his golf swing

before you meet dead relatives

who liven up brain death enough

to give you another twenty or thirty years,

wondering why dying felt so good

or if your doctor ever figured out his long game.




Richard LeDue lives in Norway House, Manitoba, Canada. He has published both online and in print. He is the author of ten books of poetry. His latest book, 'Sometimes, It Isn't Much' was released by Alien Buddha Books in February 2024.


Find more of Richard's work on Bold Monkey here: