to live again in snow
i want to live again in snow
in the high desert of new mexico
not for the thrill of car-on-ice
or the sting of frost on my cheeks
nor for the swirling mists of breath
or the crunch of dry snow underfoot
and still not for the silent grace
of a white day and whiter night
i want to live again in snow
for the simplest of selfish joys
to rise each morning bragging
that i am not defeated by
the biting cold and bitter snow
in the high desert of new mexico
nobody leaves without singing the
blues
congress in chaos
blatant liars being seated
right there in the house of reps
worse liars vying for more authority
and a bigger platform for their lies
bomb cyclone hitting the west coast
people still recovering from the
holiday travel disaster that is
Southwest
and that's not even fifteen minutes
into the evening news
what's an old poet like me to do?
what else indeed but sing the blues!
put on a backing track in a-minor
pick up my guitar and just noodle
around the neck, not caring how good
or bad it might sound because heck-
it's in a minor key and any wrong note
is only a hammer, slide, or bend away
from being the right one
what if all the problems in the world
could be solved just like that
everybody sings the blues
in a minor key, where every mistake
is made right just by changing
how kindly you treat those wrong notes
blue sky falling
i wonder if the sky had been cold and
grey
the day that chicken little cried out
would it have been a fragment of cloud,
or a bit of hail that nailed her
instead of the alleged acorn
which no one, not even she, had seen
i wonder if the sky had been orange
with the promise of the rising sun
if it could have been a thread of night
some vestige of darkness falling away
instead of the alleged acorn
which no one actually saw, no one
i wonder if the sky had been aflame
with pinks and lavenders, fiery rays
of sundown, daylight falling away
might it have been the tiniest of
meteors
instead of the alleged acorn
which henny-penny chicken little didn't
see
i wonder why the fable coloured the sky
blue
that fateful day when something hit the
hen
and set her off on a frantic mission to
tell
the king. what could have tumbled from
that sky?
nothing, except the alleged acorn
which chicken little felt but did not
see
so what am i to think, when under the
bluest sky
something like the alleged acorn, hits
me
just like my brother used to thump my
head
when we were younger and he not dead
j.lewis is an
internationally published poet, musician, nurse practitioner, and the editor of
Verse-Virtual, an online journal and community. When he is not otherwise
occupied, he is often on a kayak, exploring and photographing the waterways
near his home in California. He is the author of four full length collections
and seven chapbooks. https://www.jlewisweb.com/books.asp
No comments:
Post a Comment