Jack Galati

Bury the Old Dog Deeper than Dirt 

As the Coroner crows westward I sit

in the back of the wagon wishing that it was

someone who is not me. 

Me, but not me, so that I may see it still 

as it appears beyond the shuttering brilliance of the dawn at my back. 



I am not afraid

and I am not unwilling, but

who would be? There is no negotiation

and it is cold. 

Frost collects on the crest of the wagon and my feet are sore. 



Gravedigger, come close. 

Give me one last kiss before morning 

is all the way here

and forget 

everything I said to you last night. I was roaring drunk. 



My wife forgives me

or so she forgave me, anyhow,

and now, as the cattle come home

from a long night on the town, 

please lay me down gently and pretend I will not cry. 


Jack Galati is a writer living in Arizona. His fiction and poetry have appeared in a number of magazines and journals.