Three Women Poem by John F. McCullagh

Three Women

Rating: 5.0


They sit straight in a row, like jackdaws on a line;
three women, garbed in black, on uncomfortable metal chairs.
They speak in low murmuring voices.
Their eyes are fixed upon the burnished Bronze casket
at the front of the chapel.
The casket that contains
All that remains
of the cancer riddled ruin of a man.
Their eyes are downcast, their ankles tightly crossed.
They have come to console their sister for her loss.
She is one of them now; she has joined in their number.
Indifferent wives make excellent widows.

Saturday, July 9, 2016
Topic(s) of this poem: mourning
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Darwin Henry Beuning 27 August 2019

John, nice poem! Wives usually outlive there husbands by many years. I am not sure if Indifferent is an appropriate word. Another " 10" .

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