Bob Hicok Poem
GETTING THERE
by Bob Hicok
Anas and I had Oreos this morning, as we do
once a week, on the bench outside his store,
sharing them so we don’t get fat
(ter). Now and then, for a change,
Nutter Butters. Anas keeps a picture
of his mother above the register.
Right before he was shot three years ago
by a thief, he focused on her face.
Asked weeks later by a cop
what the man looked like, Anas thought
but didn’t say, Home. He told me that.
I told my wife, who told her mother,
who told her mother, who said, How lovely.
Even in her senility, her eyes sparked
to the word home. Anas’ wife is dead,
his mother, grandmother, but I’ve leant him
three generations of women
admiring his thoughts. Below
being a man, he’s Anas. Beneath
being Syrian, he prefers Paris.
Under wanting to get even, he doesn’t.
Retribution is like playing catch
with an egg. How far would we get with war
if every man first asked his mother,
Can I kill? Most of whom would say,
“It’s may I kill. And no, you may not.”
Bob Hicok's most recent book is Sex & Love & (Copper Canyon, 2016). Hold will be published by Copper Canyon in 2018.
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