Death in Olympia
by John DesCamp


One hundred leagues from home, white smoke,
--ancient color of bereavement--
tells the death of some vital part
of my blue chariot’s inner workings.

Charon4 arrives, gray cap and shades,
green tow truck his funeral barge;
black driving gloves and quiet drawl,
relaxed; it’s not his misfortune.

The road to Pluto’s kingdom shines
green and gold in late March sun;
Persephone returned; winter banished,
we drive south across the I-5 bridge, while
whitecaps dance the river.
Not at all the Styx that Homer tells;
perhaps the blind poet saw it wrong.
Death is joy on a day so bright.

May the dark angel come for you
with sunglasses on.






Copyright © 2024 by Red River Review. First Rights Reserved. All other rights revert to the authors.
No work may be reproduced or republished without the express written consent of the author.