ORCAS
Everything
happens in whispers
Reverence
is required
By
seascapes, thick fogs, eagles
Paddling
out of Port Hardy
In a kayak
Getting the
hang of it
Clifftop
monitoring station
With
underwater mics
Recording whale music
Ghost
singers named and numbered
Pods as
distinct as clans
Residents
and transients
Camped
above a narrow gravel beach
Tenting in
the night-dark trees
Awakened by
wet breathing
They’re
right off the shingle
Spy-hopping,
eyes bright
Watching us
watching them
Next
morning one comes paddle close
I’m well
beyond reverence
Beyond
wonder beyond awe
It glides
under the kayak
Silence is
black and white
I hold a
prayer in my mouth
OVER AMARILLO
Flying in
over Amarillo
Over a
polka dot yellow-green
Landscape
of irrigation pivots
Feedlots
full of cattle
In a
cornfed mosaic of man’s folly
Cows and
corn drink deeply
Of water
that can only come
From below
the fertilized ground
The
Ogallala Aquifer
One of the
world’s largest
Giving up
its gifts
Faster than
manic man
Can restock
its shallow shelves
Green
wheels of growing
Round pegs
in square holes
Land bone-dry
but for
Subterranean
water
How many
years of drought this time
The numbers
in and out
Don’t match
up
I land to
meet
Two good
old boys
In boots
and hats
To talk a
little ‘bidness’
Over beans
and barbeque
Bellies
full
Toothpicks
chewed
We study
fading midday light
Dark clouds
race in low
Filling the
diner’s window
Scattered
fat droplets
Become a
sheet of wrinkled water
On the
glass
The old
boys walk to the window
“Look,
Charlie, she’s rainin’”.
BADLANDS BOOGIE
Hoodoos
rise
on voodoo’d
shafts
Toadstool
tops
tense with
anticipation
waiting on
the wind
in a bomb
crater
of natural
causes
Frost
wedging
row on row
of sloped
schisms
on
sidewalls
Cathedral
spired
Glacier-worn
gullies
Cactus
pebbled
flat butte
tops
for fire-dancing
the
Badlands Boogie
Fire piled
pyre high
Pagans
stomp and shuffle
in alluvial
dust
backs bent
arms akimbo
wide as
wings
tranced
moon howling
Luna
reflecting
dead sun’s
light
Coyote
gopher snake
prey of
birds of prey
sneak
squeak and slither below
where man’s
foot fears
the Devil’s
domain
COUNTING RADISHES
I loved
gardening when I was left alone
to do it
the way I wanted to do it,
to plant
too many radishes,
to thin
then with pinching fingers,
pull weeds
and water them
and count
them into a bowl
like it was
a religious practice,
something I
actually believed in.
Lots of
exotic seeds I planted
didn’t grow
or grew up weird
like I grew
weird about what I was doing.
At least
that’s the way some saw me,
because I
was young
and had no
business
loving a garden.
Gregg
Norman is a recovering lawyer who lives
in a lakeside cottage in Manitoba, Canada. He reads and writes poetry every day
to maintain his frail grip on reality. His work has appeared in Lothlorien
Poetry Journal and has been accepted by Horror Sleaze Trash. He is also the
author of four novels and a novella.
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