Quasimodo
As he lies mid his retinue of rats, oblivious to the trickling water and the maelstrom in the babbling sewer, one might think his nose a hovel for flies in the low and oppressive August heat, but gladly he sleeps the sleep of the just, like a foetus double-crossed in the womb.
Who but the passing ethereal white clouds, or the bent proprietress of a dive in those drunken days before her passing, ever noticed to care by whim or chance how he resembled a pigeon walking in the ocean of misery and mud neighbouring the cathedral of the damned?
Or how he spit when he spoke over bowls of steaming porridge in the good hospice run by six eternally stoned eunuchs, his words brilliant as moonshine through stained glass, simple as the stars in their begging truth, though none and all understood their meanings by the soft intonations of his grunts?
And now for the umpteenth and final time he lies high in a heap like a dunghill waiting for the street-cleaners to clean him up, the sun bursting through his shuttered eyelids, his eardrums full of Gregorian chants, while the rats scurry like flawed apostles in the wake of flapping but broken wings
Leo Yankevich
If you've any comments on his poems, Leo Yankevich would be pleased to hear from you.