BLIND WILLIE’S THIRD HOUR of DARKNESS

By Mark Lager\

From Fall 2017

By age thirty-three
 I finish my ministry
 record thirty songs
 

 But I ain’t dyin’ yet
 in Beaumont
 1440 Forrest Street
 

 I open my own
 House of Prayer
 to all who are downtrodden
 

 My angel Angeline
 she takes care of me
 World War II
 

 One sweltering August afternoon
 dry as the valley of bones
 in Ezekiel
 

 The desert wind blows in
 from west Texas
 dust covers Beaumont
 

 And I remember the day
 my mama died
 the cough in the lungs
 

 The sandpaper taste
 heavy in the air
 splinters of wood
 

 Catch fire
 and our house
 burns down
 

 Then the rains
 of September
 fall in Beaumont
 

 Anna covers
 our wet mattress
 with newspapers
 

 

 

 I mumble, murmur
 can’t speak no more
 I’m descending
 

 She takes me
 to the hospital
 but they turn us away
 

 “Oh, Lord,
  I can’t keep from crying”
  
 They bury me
 in Blanchette Cemetery
 tomb with no name
 

 Year after year
 
 floods
 
 coffins 
 

 floating
 

 Through cypress groves
 

 
                   I drift far away
 

 
                                               I disappear
 

 I’m inscribed on a copper plate
 

 leaving our solar system
 

                                     submerged in deep space