The Forensic Science Of Grief Poem by M.L. Emmett

The Forensic Science Of Grief

Rating: 4.0


You breathed your last breath from the air
in this room;
that threadbare Persian carpet
holds flakes from your skin;
hairs from your head
corkscrew the dented cushions
scattered and idly waiting on the sofa;
bed linen scented with your sweat
the goose down doona that stole
your last warmth;
sleep spit and tears
human moisture that permeates
the acrylic layers of your pillow;
an eyebrow hair wedged in the tweezers;
a clipped nail that flew off
somewhere out of sight;
that new toothbrush used only once;
your flannel and towel still drying out;
the wet press footprint on the bathroom mat;
the talcum powdered slippers
abandoned under the brass bed.
Each moment of everyday
we shed ourselves
shed dead cells and renew -
a cycle of shedding
until the last
shedding of ourselves.


© M.L. Emmett

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Nicholas Grey 15 October 2020

A very moving poem about the loss of someone very close and the grief the poet feels. The details of little parts of the person left behind, the kind of things Forensic teams might find, is poignant e.g. the hair, skin flakes, eyebrow hair (in the tweezers) , the sweat, spit and scent of the person. These are all valued and treasured by the poet

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M.L. Emmett

M.L. Emmett

Reading Berkshire England
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