The Sugar Thief Poem by Ned Balbo

The Sugar Thief



If it was free, you taught, I ought to grab it
as you did: McDonald's napkins, pens,
and from the school where you were once employed
as one of two night shift custodians,
the metal imitation wood wastebasket
still under my desk. But it was sugar
that you took most often as, annoyed
on leaving Dunkin' Donuts, pancake house,
and countless diners, I felt implicated
in your pleasure, crime, and poverty.
I have them still, your Ziploc bags of plunder,
yet I find today, among the loose
change in my pockets, packets crushed or faded—
more proof of your lasting legacy.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Soul Watcher 02 February 2016

Well done Ned, Thanks for sharing

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Ned Balbo

Ned Balbo

Mineola, New York
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