photo_camera by David Anderson
In a Maine fishing port,
I smell a ghost.
He’s damp with brine.
He reeks of cod.
Maybe I even see him.
At least, there’s a shape
in the fog,
a clump like flopping sea-weed
making its way past
where the fisherman statue
stands in daylight.
He’s not alone.
Lights flicker here and there,
are part of his chilly brigade.
I stop in at the local diner
for a plate of seamy white chowder.
It’s the one dish
that glimmers from the menu.
It’s the food of the dead.