Thursday, August 29, 2013

A little shower and blackberries by the box



It was only just sprinkling, drops
sporadic, what they call
a chance, you might get rain
at the farmer’s market.  Produce
and baked goods dry under
square tents which shed
rain by the collar full
if you happen to be standing
under the edge when the rain
sheds from the fabric.
People look around, walk
around, look around –
they see the sweet corn
but not the potatoes,
red tomatoes, bright,
kohlrabi invisible,
carrots still good for eyesight,
unsold behind the beets.
People’s gazes glance,
eyes left and right, blank stares
in the middle. Stand still
with an umbrella in your hand,
no one will ever know
you were there. Only
a sprinkling, drops
sporadic, what they might
call a chance, you might
get rain at the farmer’s
market.

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Perchance



I was walking
under a blue umbrella
when I saw
a young woman
walking under long wet hair.
I watched her
hurrying in her
short blue skirt
and pale yellow tights
and I thought to myself,
perchance,
what if it had been
the other way around –
I, walking in the rain
in my yellow skirt
and pale blue tights.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Another everyday poem



I write poems like loaves of bread.
Ordinary words, a bit of mind.
They rise.
Everyday poems.
Not meant for Kings and Queens
or cast in bronze,
certainly not twelve baskets leftover
after five thousand have eaten.
With a little butter, I’m satisfied.
You bring a bottle and we’ll make a meal of it.
Tomorrow I’ll try with different words.
These poems are not everything.
And they’re not nothing.
I make them from scratch.
Fresh. Good flavor.
This one’s finished.


Thursday, August 8, 2013

The ways of geese


It was a motley
group of geese
circling over the
Kaw River Bridge.
A few high,
a few low,
a straggler,
then two.
Round and round,
a misshapen loop,
as if no one was prepared
to lead.
Then with no command
that I could hear
from down on the ground
they formed up a V
and headed upriver.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Dwight and Gabby



I often don’t see everything. I had nearly walked past the kiddie merry-go-round by the Antique Mall. Dwight – I think that’s his first name - was sitting on the sidewalk, his back against the concrete planter wall, legs splayed out, a usual spot for him. The leash for Gabby, his service dog according to the hand lettered cardboard sign beside him, was stretched across the way to where the dog lay in the shade.

Gabby is a sleek, black, short-haired dog of medium build who looks to be in the prime of her life. Dwight appears past his.

A very young boy, his hair sticking out in the back the way mine often does after a nap, sat on a stationery plastic pony, his mother standing next to him. I wasn’t really paying that much attention. I planned to walk on by as I usually did, but then Dwight scrambled to his feet, stepped over a few yards of sidewalk, and offered the woman a coin or two.

I missed most of the exchange – I imagine that she might had have time to refuse – but I just don’t know what happened. It would have been impolite of me to have stopped in my tracks or to have asked any questions later, but as I walked, I heard the music start behind me, and I then I finally turned at the barber pole, stationery against the wall as usual, to look back.

The merry-go-round was going around. The little boy was standing on the sidewalk, patting at the ponies as they trotted by. Then the mother was rummaging in her purse. In a few more short moments - life is momentary after all - mother and child walked over to where Dwight had regained his seat.

I couldn’t see him directly around the corner of the Ernst Hardware Store building, but I saw Gabby nose out, friendly. Maybe it was the words, ‘not this time,’ the mother said as she approached, laughing. The boy, a little cautious, kept his hands to his sides, almost eye to eye with that sleek black dog. After some small discussion, which I could not hear, the mother and her boy turned the other way and walked down the sidewalk.

I too, turned and continued on.

Dwight and Gabby stayed in that breezeway soaking in the sun. None of us, I suppose, ever sees everything.

***

Postscript: A little over a month after I wrote down this story, a friend of Dwight’s, a fellow veteran of the streets, informed me that Dwight’s body had been found in the Kaw near where he often camped. He presumed that a seizure had thrown Dwight into the river, but the newspaper only reported that no foul play was evident.

Dwight’s son will take Gabby home to Colorado. His mother claimed his ashes. Except for his dog, Dwight Sexton was alone when he died. He was 49.