Deadsong
I.
I will die in a gasping panic
with plastic in my windpipe.
II.
I will die in a rat-king
of shrapnel and rubber,
piecemeal by the interstate.
(It will be my fault –
I do get moony.)
III.
I will die trying to fix
a household appliance
I do not understand.
IV.
I will die the way my father
says I will: trying to pet some
wild and cornered creature.
V.
I will die the way my mother
says I will: famous and ancient,
painless in my sleep.
VI.
I will die upon the hatchet
of a charismatic maniac.
(I am always inviting
vampires inside.)
VII.
I will die from a benzo overdose,
which I’m told is uncommon.
(Cessation is worse.)
VIII.
I will die concussed and
bloody on the halfpipe.
(I am too old to ollie but
the urge is only growing.)
IX.
I will die in the desert,
molting like a cicada.
(I will not remember
how I got there. I will
try to drink the sand.)
X.
I will die when the mole I’m told
to monitor goes melanoma.
(I am building a guest
room for the cancer.)
XI.
I will die early in the fracas
when the Trumpists come blasting.
(I’m a partisan, to be sure,
but my body is soft
and flinching.)
XII.
I will die, uninsured,
of some curable malady.
(Debt is a splintering pillory.
A lifetime of little deaths.)
XIII.
I will die the way that men do,
never having apologized,
barnacled with secrets.
XIV.
I will die of shame
at a cocktail party.
(My solar plexus tells
me this is possible.)
XV.
I will die at sea,
reefing the mainsail
to balance the tempest.
I will die when
Leviathan rises
from the wet,
a shadow on shadows,
and asks me her
unanswerable question.
*
Anthony Immergluck is a poet, publishing professional, and musician with an MFA in Poetry from New York University – Paris. Some of his recent work has been published in TriQuarterly, Beloit Poetry Review, Tahoma Literary Review, Narrative, and Nimrod. Originally from the Chicago area, he now lives in Madison, Wisconsin.