At a Café in
St. Mark’s Square
The vitality of Venice
Is a mysterious
Hallucination
An opium dream
Of the senses
Of woven cultures
Down a silk road
Along the Grand Canal
Ideas and gunpowder
On gondolas
And Chinese junks
Traders in passions
And possibilities
Beneath the Muslim
Architecture
Of St. Mark’s square
Under another hopeful
Veneto sun
New Machines
Unwilling
To be conquered
On far off peaks
With Buddhist patience
And a Zen for sitting still
Listening
For the whispers
From across the ridge
Through the deep pines
Down where Kerouac
Drowned
In the surge
Of a sudden need to move
Toward new discoveries
In the sunshine
Of cracked minds
And old ghosts
In new machines
Summer Skies
Constant
Restless activity
A detailed wandering
In strips of consciousness
Ramblings
And pontifications
Buzzing
On every street corner
And in the empty lot
By the convenience store
With the tattered awning
Where we always
Ran for cover
From the slate grey skies
Of summer storms
Cracking bright light
Across the horizon
The Edge of
Town
Beaten
Reduced to the essentials
Tension and stress
Pulling
At the back meat
A high wire act
Without a net
Dragged under by beasts
Over wild cries
In the wilderness
As church bells ring
In the square
On Sundays
As a requiem for sanctity
And deliverance
From sin
In the small apartment
By the river
In the springtime
On the edge of town
Walking
Through Walls
A new type of secret
Revealing
Salome at the nativity
Altering reality
And how we see the world
The blasphemy
Of Joseph’s first wife
Extended families
And the judgement
Of exclusion or inclusion
Depending on the tracks
And which side of the wall
Has the most cracks
Or the gospel
According to Mark
With deep rhythmic
Undertones
And the faith
Of the Holy Ghost
On a path
Of pure resistance
John Drudge is a social worker working in the
field of disability management and holds degrees in social work, rehabilitation
services, and psychology. He is the author of four books of poetry:
“March” (2019), “The Seasons of Us” (2019), New Days (2020), and Fragments
(2021). His work has appeared widely in numerous literary journals, magazines,
and anthologies internationally. John is also a Pushcart Prize and Best of the
Net nominee and lives in Caledon Ontario, Canada with his wife and two
children.
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