
Wounded and winded
by the wind and the waves,
he scratches her name in the sand,
her love is rescinded,
she hides in the caves
where the water caresses the land;
he sings her name in spite of his distress,
and fashions beauty out of loneliness.
*****
Damian Balassone writes: “With regards to the poem, I have no connection to either Mormons or mermaids – it’s about polar opposites. I think the last line came first. He doesn’t get the girl, but he gets the poem.”
‘The Mormon and the Mermaid’ was first published in the Shot Glass Journal.
Damian Balassone is the author of four books, including the forthcoming collection of short poems and epigrams Love is a Weird Cat and the children’s book Here, Bear and Everywhere. You can read more here.
“the Other Side of the Tunnel” by ihave3kids is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.
From Mormon to merman
is such a short shift
but if you confess it
nobody will bless it
or give you shrift
but only a sermon
and a ban none will lift…
so wait for the waves
while all Utah raves
you can’t heal the rift
or ever go back
so gather bladder-wrack
and have some fun
popping its bubbles
as if they were your troubles
burst and gone one by one
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