David Hernandez is the author of five poetry collections, including Hello I Must Be Going, and has been awarded two Pushcart Prizes as well as the Kathryn A. Morton Prize. He lives with his wife, the writer Lisa Glatt, in Southern California, where he teaches creative writing at California State University, Long Beach.

Three Poems

by David Hernandez

At the Post Office

The line is long, processional, glacial,
and the attendant a giant stone, cobalt blue
with flecks of white, I’m not so much
looking at a rock but a slab of night.
The stone asks if anything inside the package
is perishable. When I say no the stone
laughs, muted thunderclap, meaning
everything decays, not just fruit
or cut flowers, but paper, ink, the CD
I burned with music, and my friend
waiting to hear the songs, some little joy
after chemo eroded the tumor. I know flesh
is temporary, and memory a tilting barn
the elements dismantle nail by nail.

People on couch
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