stringsA Poem by Daniel Atkinsonan old friend.
my guitar snaps a crackly chuckle from the corner
as i sit down at my desk with my typewriter and a cigarette, looking like your archetypal poet, but without the gleam. my acoustic laughs harder and harder, cobwebs pulsing in and out with every wooden gasp. suddenly i can't take any more. "what the hell's so funny?" i snap after my fourth misspelled word. the dots on my guitar's fretboard wink at me while the strings loosen and tighten themselves in a recovery of sorts. he smiles as best a guitar can. "it's just... for all those clacks and dings that machine dishes out, i ain't never heard it breathe a whisper of music." my guitar says. you can hear the rust on his strings in every letter. "i'm making money with it," i reply. "good money, honest money." i probably sound a little defensive. he barks in black and white. the strings hum. "good money?" he says. "i didn't know dirty cigarettes and a bust-up apartment meant you was makin' good money." he smacks his lips thoughtfully. "guess times have changed." i cough gray smoke and look down at the cheap little ciggies sleeping on top of my desk. and to think i used to be that peaceful. "i guess they have," i sigh. my guitar rocks back and forth, his sickly plastic finish throwing a dull flash. "c'mon," he growls. "pick me up. play a lick. strum a chord." i grunt and glance back at my typewriter for a second opinion, at the poem that might or might not ever be finished. guess i'm not in a charitable mood today. i stand up from my seat (it squeaks), pick up my guitar from the corner (he cheers), and carry him by the neck down the hall to my neighbor's place. i leave him on the bristly welcome mat. "hey!" my guitar shouts as i turn my back. "what in f**k is this? come back here and PLAY ME!" i don't look back as i slam the door behind me and light another cigarette. © 2011 Daniel AtkinsonAuthor's Note
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