Ars Poetica w/ Smoked Rabbit

by Muiz Àjàyí

i never intended to be philosophical. when you watch
a man lose his breath, faith turns skeletal. in the end,

a bone is just a bone, not a metaphor for ache.
the heart, a pack of pulsing nerves, doubling

as an ache-measuring mechanism. on one of such days
when my ache was most acute & i walked the dark

road linking the campus cemetery to the botanical garden,
i mused the irony of it—the flower & the dead’s oath

of proximity. on the sidewalk, a boy is skinning two white
rabbits over a furnace. i think of the armoury of words

debate on animal slaughter, but my mouth waters still
at the smell of coney on grille. i pull out my notepad

to write a poem. when you watch a man lose
his breath, faith becomes skeletal. when you watch

a bunny lose its fur, its fate turns skeletal. on second
thoughts, i tear out the sheet, throw it in the flames.

Photo of rusty metal and sheep's wool by Rachel Claire on Pexels
Photo by Rachel Claire on Pexels

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