A Lullwater Journal
[1]
By Lullwater, a parade of languages:
A well dressed man yelling into a cell
Phone in Russian, a woman with long straw
Hair and bare feet walking by, talking puppy
To a very young Aleutian romping
In the grass, a Chinese cavalcade now –
A father, and his daughter, and her son –
Passes like a dragon, fishing poles in hand,
And beside me this brawly bearded giant,
Resting, chewing on a stalk of dry rye
As a spider clothes him in silk, whispering
via grass telephone again, “Learn
How to loaf, and invite your soul”.
[2] As sun kamikazes below the tree line Half the lake becomes a mirror in which You can now see your reflection, Absent the angry afternoon glare, For an hour or so before the owl-darkness Ascends from the roots of the forest, Whose tree tops are now whorls of light, Which is what they tell you heaven looks like, And giving you company in this witnessing Is Gregor Samsa’s cousin, a busy writing spider Working with his spindle, spool, and shuttle, In anticipation of his holy dinner.
My Poems
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