top of page
  • Writer's pictureDavid Carlson

Wednesday, August 28, 2024: You go to the place you always thought you would go,the place you kept lit in an alcove in your head.

Wednesday, August 28, 2024: You go to the place you always thought you would go, the place you kept lit in an alcove in your head.


The Afterlife: a poem by Billy Collins


THE AFTERLIFE

While you are preparing for sleep, brushing your teeth,

or riffing through a magazine in bed,

the dead Of the day are setting out on their journey.

 

They are moving off in all imaginable directions,

each according to his own private belief,

and this is the secret that silent Lazarus would not reveal:

that everyone is right, as it turns out.


You go to the place you always thought you would go,

the place you kept lit in an alcove in your head.

 



Some are being shot up a funnel of flashing colors

into a zone of light, white as a January sun.

Others are standing naked before a forbidding judge who sits

with a golden ladder on one side, a coal chute on the other.

 



Some have already joined the celestial choir

and are singing as if they have been doing this forever,

while the less inventive find themselves stuck

in a big air—conditioned room full of food and chorus girls.

 

Some are approaching the apartment of the female God,

a woman in her forties with short wiry hair

and glasses hanging from her neck by a string.

With one eye she regards the dead through a hole in her door.





There are those who are squeezing into the bodies

of animals—-eagles and leopards—and one trying on

the skin of a monkey like a tight suit,

ready to begin another life in a more simple key,

 



while others float off into some benign vagueness,

little units of energy heading for the ultimate elsewhere.



2 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Friday, September 13, 2024

Friday! September 13, 2024 Notes from the recent Pax Christi Zoom meeting. On Palestine: A critical problem is that many Catholics...

Comments


bottom of page