Dispensable
I didn’t choose the pen because I had to or because of some other ditzy romantic drivel. In retrospect it was something quite different that drove me. For drones only that platitude
about long hours alone honing the craft. I was cocksure that “Hello Emily” would be plenty. Such was my insight that I
needed but unbolt the gate for great stuff to flow, lavishly.
Callow though I was, I trumpeted to my stately mates that great Joyce had ragged it because nobody read him. Real skill,
I puffed, knew how to scent the Sweet Will where reverence and brilliance bloomed and fused.
“That’s what we must do,” I told them, emphatically. No one challenged me.My grizzled peers
greeted my pomposity with wanton mystification.
But create something capable of seducing both the sincere and the savvy – I had no clue. Still, when I preened
my jeune homme de lettres, oozing both pensive and vulnerable, the girls would pant and purr.
It was trippy but I hadn’t the moxie to know the score: the pen was dispensable.
Lost
Beyond the fire lurking low
the cub close by to where we stood
went unseen but in her wake
our bin was bare; next day though
moving easy through the woods
she took steps a mutt might take.
Then upright swaying – to, fro
she seemed to say “where’s the goods?”
As if pals at hearty play
we gaped at her graceful show
big-eyed, wide grins stretching broad
when it dawned: this was no game.
We gathered handy stones to
hustle her into the woods
then mom appeared at the brake.
Our ruse at first made them go
but not for long, we understood.
We packed, stroked across the lake.
At our new site by fire’s glow,
guide’s tale froze our festive mood.
Destiny had raised the stakes:
their new mien a dead-end slough -
ease with man and untamed blood,
for them and us, baneful freight.
Wild Waters
Why not swim across
Martha’s Vineyard
where weather may turn
at any instant
from Arctic blast to Malibu dunk
It can’t be worse
than Cheever’s Neddy
whose story turned
indeed that quickly
from golden boy to fraudulent bunk
If you delve into
wild waters
You might excite
the No Limit Look
You might even emerge
in solid sync
with motcross,
tech-no,
manga, punk
Roy J.
Adams has been a short-order cook, a magician, a professor, a poet but not yet
a pirate. He has a black belt, paratrooper wings, a scuba certificate, an
honourable discharge, a driver’s license, a Ph.D. and a Philly accent. He’s
touched mountain peaks, ocean deeps and steaming jungle mud. He’s run for
office and for his life. A corkboard in his mancave is full of certificates won
in poetry contests. His poetry’s been published in Canada, the U.S., the U.K,
Malta, India, Australia, Singapore and Ireland, the land his mother came from.
He is the author of a chapbook, a full book of poetry, and a history of the
Tower Poetry Society. Not long ago, he was the Poetry Superhighway’s Poet of
the Week.
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