God, God Poem by Fleda Brown

God, God



We dressed for church. I had a white hat
and white gloves when I was fifteen, no joke.
You had to do that to show God you cared.

God's eyes were stained glass, and his voice
was pipe organ. He was immortal, invisible,
while my panty-hose itched and my atheist

father chewed his tongue and threatened to run
out the door but didn't for my mother's sake,
and she swallowed her fate, this marriage,

like a communion cracker, and my brain-
damaged brother lurched around the church
nursery, and my sweeter sister watched me

with huge brown eyes to see what I'd do next.
My God, why did I turn my eyes upward when
we were all there, then, in the flesh? I am so

sorry about God, sorry we fastened that word
to the sky. God's not even legal in Hebrew.
If you get the vowel caught between the two

consonants of your lips, it can carry you
dangerously up like a balloon over what you'd
give anything to be in the middle of, now.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
K. V. Venkataramana 19 January 2018

An excellent poem. Loved the last four lines: 'If you get the vowel caught between the two consonants of your lips, it can carry you dangerously up like a balloon over what you'd give anything to be in the middle of, now. ' 10/10

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Fleda Brown

Fleda Brown

Columbia, Missouri
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