was slipping
on down towards afternoon,
hanging by a
thread from an unseen wishing star.
Tipping and
tumbling,
the pale
moon had spilled out most of its cream.
And now I
have nearly forgotten my nighttime dream.
Instead, I
turned at the near corner rather than proceeding on ahead
and shortly
a silent Furbie sitting at a yard sale caught my eye -
unwinking.
The woman standing
there with her coffee cup would let it go to a good home –
she said.
The Furbie
had no batteries and there was no guarantee that the well-worn toy would speak
–
let alone
tell me what I wanted so dearly to know.
Still I let
go of what I had been so wishfully thinking of for now - this moment now here.
And so with my
groceries in my one hand,
I took that
old Furbie up with the other empty hand -
the hand that
had been holding onto thin air -
I held the
thing in my hand.
And then I
saw a monkey matching card game marked at fifty cents –
that too, I added.
And a stacking
up wood blocks and marble toy that seemed too good to let go
for only two
bucks more.
Though with hardly
a second look, I passed easily on by a perfectly rusty metal chair –
also only presently
priced at a mere two dollars.
It seemed as
if that old chair might as well once have been painted green as blue –
but I was
done looking for what I no longer really needed anymore.
But the
chair might indeed once have been blue.
Who knew?
The folks running
the yard sale offered to toss in a single postcard into my hands so full of
little
for nothing.
The card that
I had perused and put down and then had picked up anyway.
That particular
postcard of a painting of pretty people partying
in a long
gone night club so long ago.
And just so
you know,
the painting
was called ‘Nightlife.’
It had been painted
well before even I had even eventually ever been born -
painted by a
painter named Motley, but what did it all matter?
And to what
point – all these words spilling out of my head?
Still I
added the card to my negligible burden of stuff
and I walked
on.
And then there
appeared somewhat rusted ahead of me –
nearly all
of a maple tree’s red pointed maple leaves,
waiting on
the ground for the rake …
or the wind …
or the coming
winter …
or my
shuffling feet ...
which ever
would come first in order of happening.
Hardly
questions even worth asking –
I suppose I might
then well have well said.
After all, the
branches above my head had just let them go –
all of the
rusted red maple leaves -
the branches
had just let them go.
So what
choice did I ever even have?
The sky so high
up above me held back the night for a morning–
the sky –
bright October
sky –
sky blue.
And then once
again
I was day
dreaming
of you.
1 comment:
I had to look up Furby--couldn't remember what it was. Like this.
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