Thursday, January 29, 2015

In time


The Frisbee drifted over last years leaves,
I put out my hand to catch it.
It floated on by and as I turned,
a dark-haired woman smiled
and caught my eye.
I walked on, the leaves whispered
to me of the times of love
with each step I took.
The Frisbee flew ahead to a slender man
standing considerably behind my time.
I smiled and thought of a short-haired woman.
I would be home in time for supper.

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Old Year's end



I crossed over that ribbon of highway,
that highway had just crossed over the river.
As I stepped onto the curb,
an eagle crossed over above me
and then glided over the river
to a tree on the other side.

I was bundled against the biting cold,
flannel-lined pants over long johns.
Then as I walked on the path below,
heading back towards the bridge,
I saw a woman jogging easily
along the levee above me,
heading downstream.
For every heavy step back I took,
she skipped ahead two.
Her legs were bare and glowing red.

At the dead end of the year,
I took it all I saw for a sign.
The highway will take us nowhere.
The eagle and the woman are
showing me the way.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

The sign


The gulls were turning and dipping
over the outwash at Bowersock south.
The winter sun squinted my eyes.
The wind drew moisture from my nose.
I lifted my arms, not to join the gulls,
but to salute their vigor.
Still, I managed
to get one foot off the ground.
One gull left the others
and flew off downstream.
I saw my breath in the air,
outward from where I was gazing.
I think it was a good sign.

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Mist



The drizzle was light,
the droplets so fine,
the spacing like skaters on thin ice.

Without the wind on my cheek
and the love I did seek,
I would have missed it all,
after all.

Thursday, January 1, 2015

The power of invisiblity


It might be that trees have the power of invisibility.
It seems evident to me that they cannot walk away
and hide behind a light pole.
But people seldom remark on trees
except when they green in spring,
or color yellow and orange and red in the fall.
But on this winter’s day,
I suddenly saw the bare branches of some trees
stretch upwards to grasp at the sky.
And as I stepped along,
the nearer branches crossed over  
in front of farther branches
and then back over my head.
I think that it was the movement of irregular lines,
crossing and crossing again,
that caught my wandering eye.
And then I saw a sycamore standing tall,
silvery white bark reflecting the winter sun into my eyes.
I was not blinded,
but I may have blinked in some amazement,
I have passed by that same spot a hundred times
in a hundred and one days
and only today did I see that sycamore standing there.
It must be the ubiquity of trees,
or my mind preoccupied with everything else,
I walk beneath the sky almost entirely unaware.
Some days, I’m sure, I’ve missed even seeing the sky.
Invisibility is one answer I ponder,
but with the tips of my fingers losing sensation,
I at least have the thought to step into the bookstore.
And then, there she stood behind the counter,
her hair the silvery color of sycamore bark,
strands tied up and crossing over each other
in a knot reaching upwards from the back of her head.
I swear, she must have stood there a hundred times or more
when I have pushed open that door.
I think that beauty stands invisible
as we pass through a forest of trees.

for Trix