A poem is a mountain, a pond, an ocean, a desert,
a forest, a grain of sand, a lost child needing a home.
What a day of nothing in writing,
looking out windows,
pacing around the house and yard,
turning on music, turning it off,
snacking on Girl Scout cookies.
I hoped for a word to flutter in,
a butterfly of a thought,
a sigh from the grasslands,
or fantastic creatures galloping
down the Huachuca Mountain slopes.
I had a glass of wine,
thinking I would see a change in the sky’s colors,
or I’d put a new spin on a curious idea
scribbled in the margin of my notebook.
I managed to insert a comma, instead.
I had one more glass and played
my trumpet to a forties big band tune
and was sure I saw dragons leap
from quickly moving clouds.
I can’t sit still and wait for something to happen.
Surely there’s a restless poem or two in all that.
Maybe tomorrow. But for this afternoon,
with some Syrah and The Wailin’ Jennys,
I’ll soften into the lay of the landscape.
From: Small Places, Big Places, Everywhere
Unpublished MS p. 44
I can see you doing all of that. I especially like the positron clouds.
ReplyDeletePositron clouds?
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