Forecasts
For some, August is the beginning of winter,
even though it’s eighty-five degrees
and trees are colossally green,
shading the upper porches on the
street’s three-stories where vacationing
kids, buoyant and bright, smoke legal weed,
“Any day now,” one young woman says
loud enough so I hear her on my own porch.
“the leaves will rust and drift to the ground,
turning the branches into skeletons.”
“But lovely skeletons,” a friend replies,
“brown and black and opening up the sky.”
Summer Dances
The branches outside my window,
flush with motionless green leaves
against an August white-blue sky,
are orchestrated suddenly by a murmuring
breeze into dancing the rhumba.
A soft rhythm section sways
into a flickering tempo, soft and subtle
and calming until the wind picks up
and the compliant, gifted leaves
switch without a moment’s pause
to a sweet, percussive samba.


As I lie abed at home nursing painful, broken ribs, your poems pull me back into late summer and forward into the next seasonal change. Most of all, they take me to my windows and away from my bingeing on Nurse Jackie reruns. You've made me recall other seasons and loved ones I've lost, and I'm carried along by your beautiful imagery and ever-active imagination. Your poems have moved me once again, Alec. That says it all. Fondly, Gail
ReplyDeleteThat’s so kind, Gail. Just saw this. Love, Alec
ReplyDelete