At home
my aimless mind
writes poemless lines.
Homeless under
trees or sky,
my lines take aim
to fly.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Crayfish

Crayfish, crawdad,
mudbug, crawfish,
little river lobster,
zip, bump, swish.

Friday, March 7, 2014

Tools Hope For Use

                                                             --for Joe

Here is a man whom rusted metal follows home
like strange ducklings. Ancient farm implements,
grizzled trapper's chains and shackles, vaguely
Amish hand tools all gather round him,
attentively leaning the way a dog's head does
when it is particularly curious or hungry.
Tools hope for use; metal hungers for occupation.
The greatest insult equipment is ever asked to bear
is that of being made merely decorative.
The souls of wagon wheels and oxen plows die
when planted in flower beds to be leaned on and seen.
Perhaps they sense that here is a man who
does not care if they are ever swans
but seeks to use them as they long to be used--
to make them gleam only if their purpose
is to be sharpened. So they follow him
like strange ducklings hoping to grow back
into their capable ugly duck selves
once more.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Wisdom of Birds

In the dim, just-stirring hours
of a pre-migration March morning
the voice of a slate-colored junco,
like an insistent telephone,
called me from reverie upon my pillow.
Little cousin chickadee,
up from Carolina,
piped his reminiscence
of days closer to the dawn.
Little birds do not bring secrets
to me as it is said they do to some.
Instead the sparrows and nuthatches
remind me no light is to be wasted
with sleeping. Though there is time enough
for gathering seeds and sewing
there is none to spare
lest I forgo the Spring.