Ghosts on the Road Poem by David Rivard

Ghosts on the Road



A bookkeeping man,
tho one sure to knock on wood,
and mostly light

at loose ends—my friend
who is superstitiously funny, & always
sarcastic—save once,

after I'd told him
about Simone's first time
walking—a toddler,

almost alone, she'd
gripped her sweater, right hand
clutched

chest-high, reassured
then, she held on to herself
so, so took a few

quick steps—
oh, he said, you know what? Leonard
Cohen, when he was 13,

after his father's
out-of-the-blue heart attack, he slit
one of the old man's

ties, & slipped a
message into it, then buried it
in his backyard—

73 now, he can't
recall what he wrote—(threadbare
heartfelt prayer perhaps,

or complaint)—
his first writing anyway.
The need to comfort

ourselves is always
strongest at the start,
they say—

do you think
that's true? my friend asked.
I don't, he said,

I think the need
gets stronger, he said, it
just gets stronger.

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