For My Last Meal I Drink an Entire Pot of Kona Coffee Poem by Tresha Faye Haefner

For My Last Meal I Drink an Entire Pot of Kona Coffee

Rating: 5.0


Because I hear you can taste the fire in the aroma.

Where the volcanic ash fed the trees and the berries
and the beans. Where the Japanese settled the land
and pulled the plow and left dirt in the scuttling steam
coming off the cup, and the history of the island,
indented in the dirt. I want to drink something heavy and religious
as the underside of expensive flowers
and the beginning of new leaves.

II. Because I want to imagine those horses are mine
who tugged the immigrant wheel
through the field, the palm trees singing
their wet song into the tanzanite wind.

I could walk through any grove, pick any coconut from a tree
and taste the subtle milk, slippery as eels
vining their way through a melancholy lagoon.

III. Because Los Angeles in the morning is nothing
like Honolulu at night. Honolulu, where the smell
of roasting coffee is bright as pineapple,
and the little yellow rim of volcanic ash circles
in the cup, and the sun rests, a pearl in a blue
oyster bed of clouds.

IV. Because we are all only a little footnote
in history. Because the foot that treads
the earth takes us away from our sorrow.

V. Because the day is getting on with itself.
My old lovers, the crows, fly away,
the palm trees sway like the dry hands
of deposed royalty. And I am full
of ancient sorrow, and have nowhere left to go.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Chinedu Dike 22 April 2019

An insightful piece of poetry, well articulated and nicely penned with conviction. A beautiful creation. Thanks for sharing Faye.

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Castellenas John 21 April 2019

Powerful use of words and thoughts. You took the reader on a journey with you. A amazing poem.

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