About having been living under a rock. |
There was not much room, and I have lost forty pounds. I sought the illumination of sun one day, so I clawed my way out from beneath my igneous rock. Excuse my dirt; my white beard is soil-filled, moist moss as well. The huge rock I leave behind sits on the edge of a ravine; set deep within the ground, it presses roots gnarled taut. I, like a mole, had tunneled sideways to abide beneath. So now I walk a gravel road and see new houses through the woods, then I come upon the main highway before long. Yet how bereft of vehicles it is! Oh slimy me, my eyes loam- filled, my clothes threadbare, and I a living sight unseemly. The sun sands raw my pale neck with rays of ultraviolet. Before I have walked far, I come upon a gas station, yet it is not the Shell Station that I remember being there. Some customers inside, yet they act grim and keep apart as if they are afraid. And some are wearing masks too! Then as they eye me, there is a collective gasp; looks to kill, reactions such as if I reek— living under a rock, I guess I do. On the TV screen, in the corner, news of something called Corona Virus: infection, death, States in red and shortages as pleas go out from everywhere. I need to catch up on the news, brush mud from my cuffs. 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp Winner 4-4-20 |