Acquired Taste
If he’s perturbed at all by
the drowning
wasp, twirling in week-old
dishwater,
or dismayed at the ruin of what’s
left
of their ficus—its leaves shriveled
and
dropping like question marks on the
floor—
he refuses to concede any of it.
His was a talent for beginning; but
once
past the shallow bluster of
seduction
he found her to be an acquired
taste, like
even a single malt Scotch. He’d deny
using the toothbrush she left behind
and claim that photographs of her,
and them
together, didn’t upset him, that
they were
taken down to mute the walls; he’d
never
get used to the colors she chose.
And he’s been too busy to buy new
paint,
so the unfaded rectangles still mock
the weakness of his endgame.
Resigning
to suffer through her favorite
Coltrane,
he sips diluted Scotch and wonders
why
one wants to acquire a taste for
anything.
Allen Weber
If you have any comments on this
poem, Allen Weber would be
pleased to
hear them.