Life is beautiful and tissue thin
The
black bear and her cubs
travel
a full day through enemy country
to
reach
a
tangle of blackberries
The
raven and her mate
break
the woods into a grid,
follow
the hunter from above,
and
glide in after the bloody
hunter
clears out
Early
one morning while
following
tracks,
see
a startled herd of
whitetails
break from
their
tender ferns
and
flee past me
like
a river.
Twin
herons
fly
low over the deck,
right
through the beech grove,
the
woods tremble in ecstasy.
Grazing
head freezes
and
the apple eating
summer
buck
vanishes
from the orchard.
Fields
of Mighty War
“I
was so tired, I told my Mother,
“that
I could read people’s minds
As
they got on the bus.”
“I
know,” she said, “I’m the same way.”
People
jaywalking in Congress St.
at
lunch time,
I
hear “Fields of Mighty War”
in
my overheating brain while waving
at
my ex-girlfriend across
the
street.
No
shadow on noon street,
just
going to lunch at the bar,
then
shoot a flash game of 8 ball,
loose
tie and cigarettes,
I am
trying to live
my
minutes.
A
block away,
next
to the aquamarine river,
my
Grandfather shovelled coal
in
the sun.
“We
better get back,” someone says.
How
did we get off that break-down lane?
The
trailer jumped the hitch
on
the Chicago Skyway
and
scared the hell out of us.
Punched
a hole in the tailgate,
Punched
another in the differential.
That
night, my mother-in-law made me coffee
And
we smoked cigarettes.
My
wife held my hand.
My
little daughter tumbled on the carpet.
How
did we get off that break-down lane?
A
lady made a call.
The
gospel choir blue bus
With
“Trust Jesus” on the side.
Saturday
afternoon, and the wrecker driver
knew
a guy who could braze the
hole
in the differential.
The
sun had a beautiful goodbye,
and
God was the drummer in the back,
in
the dark.
Mistakes
Mistakes
reappear and make him
speak
dream talk,
a
coda to memory dreams that require
response.
The
mind takes it’s time,
will
arrange its ducks on a misty pond.
Wake
up in the dark,
an
old man
listens
to the rain.
That’s
good. He thinks,
we
need that rain.
The
pond grows.
The
man dozes.
The
ducks take off
And
fly away.
God
God,
my love
Is
deep, stormy and private.
I’m
not looking for
the
missing piece.
I
need a machine shop
grinding
my grooved shoes on Sunday.
Changing
the front brakes
beneath
a fender tarp,
Snow
blows angry,
opaque
sky,
I’m
doing my best
out
here, dammit.
John Harold Olson - Is a retired Special Education teacher in Las Vegas. Transitioning to being a hospice volunteer.
Nice ones . Breakdown Lane in particular resonates with me.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
ReplyDelete