Roads better than Rome’s
and we are all so very far from our homes
white lines guide hand on wheel over blacktop trails for combustion wagons
to where the trees
grow short and the days are as long as dragons
a small town and its gorgeous scenes
of women walking out of magazines
smelling old books in tiny boutiques
admiring the friendly shop owners peddling antiques
is that Achilles break-dancing between plays in Chautauqua
square?
There? where a camp dog watches his master blare,
serenading those sun-glassed tourists with Shakespeare on their
tongue?
strumming his nylon strings with little pieces of himself—young
the hat out, a couple of dollars and a handful of silver
coin—nesting
we camp under stars that hum—where darkness becomes a kind
of resting
I dream of my home in the rain
a place where trains bring grain—to the sea
woke up to rock in the back, damn arm numb and tingly
sunrise shatters the chill of these arid lands
the creek side, is where I wash my face and hands
Mega mom bangs out breakfast for her four teens
they Meer-cat me, sniff the air and return to their routines
tall trees tugging my eyes to the brow, and everything is
fine,
here amongst the pom-pom fingered ponderosa pines
I walk off cold to take hot piss near the frog pond and game
room
the only one awake is walking off towards his ditch doom
and Mr blackbird, who are you wearing that armband for?
are you too missing someone you see no more?
high above the cattails and thistles
and now I wonder the phrase, chanted in whistles
Burnt bee? Tur-key? Oh no, it must be,
this, this is hur-ting me…
wandering lose in the gravel shoulder
every step I feel somehow older
finding my winding way to a lake dedicated to emigrants and
rowboats
there cross-legged on a grassy jetty letting my soul strum
the low notes
And I feel altogether complete and so very alone,
as if one is breathing in and the other out.
1 comment:
I will start Meer-catin everything! Love it!
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