Poem
Randall Mann
Last Call
Last Call
Last Call
A giant bird-of-paradise
has climbed the bar:
in this paradise
there are no flowers,
no flowers at all.
When Happy Hour
becomes Last Call—
Adam in drag
our royalty—
we buy her gin
for eternity
(an unseen deejay
scores the years
with pulsing music
of the spheres).
Now the queen has gone,
gone again
in search of love,
in search of sin.
It’s closing time.
You were not at fault.
I drain my glass
and lick the salt.
© 2004, Randall Mann
From: Poetry, Vol. 184, No. 4, August
Publisher: Poetry, Chicago
From: Poetry, Vol. 184, No. 4, August
Publisher: Poetry, Chicago
Poems
Poems of Randall Mann
Close
Last Call
A giant bird-of-paradise
has climbed the bar:
in this paradise
there are no flowers,
no flowers at all.
When Happy Hour
becomes Last Call—
Adam in drag
our royalty—
we buy her gin
for eternity
(an unseen deejay
scores the years
with pulsing music
of the spheres).
Now the queen has gone,
gone again
in search of love,
in search of sin.
It’s closing time.
You were not at fault.
I drain my glass
and lick the salt.
From: Poetry, Vol. 184, No. 4, August
Last Call
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