Play, One Evening
Two young boys return
After playing (explorers?
Cops and robbers?) in
The wood lot and brambles Of the backyard, bare feet Covered with red clay
And laughter streaming Off their faces like rain That is falling into this
Evening’s sunlight. Their clothes hug Their young bodies,
Which are free, mostly, Of this tormenting Desire and striving,
Which has taken Root in mine. Yet the wheel of
Suffering has been Set in motion even In their case, even as
They whoop in delight When they score A direct hit with
A frayed tennis ball At the little bronze Buddha Put under that sturdy
Oak by the Zen meditator Next door. How much Metta do we all need
Here, O Enlightened One, You who have broken The rafters and the ridge
Pole of trishna, the house Builder, and have taught Men to bounce suffering
Off themselves, like this Muddy tennis ball!
My Poems
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