Saturday morning
and the sky
is gentle blue
Has it been
only three years
since I watched
a mother
find
her dead son's
marine uniform
in the ruins
of her home?
soiled in ways
that will never
wash out.
The detritus
of a nation's
failure rubbed
into the fabric
of the world
Politicians smile,
announce the coming
victory
raise joined hands
in triumph
speak about a bright
and shining future
They do not see
the haunted eyes
of frightened souls
fleeing from the coast
and the sky
such a gentle blue
today.
Saturday, August 30, 2008
Waiting for Gustav
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Monday, August 25, 2008
A Quiet Evening
"What's wrong," he asked, |
and she gazed, passive |
past |
the foot of the bed, |
considered |
whether to tell him |
how she felt, wondered |
whether it was worth |
the extra tension, whether |
it would pile up |
against the door |
like snow, |
pinning them inside. |
The rain poured down |
like complaints, the storm |
downgraded |
from a hurricane |
to a nagging |
wife. |
She thought |
about concessions |
she'd made, things |
she'd left |
unsaid |
to keep the peace, |
and sighed, sadness |
eating |
at the corners |
of her eyes. |
"Nothing," she replied, |
"Let's read." |
She picked up |
a magazine |
and read aloud |
in a voice |
that was sure |
and confident |
but never speaks |
out of turn. |
Monday, August 11, 2008
Old Friends, New Regrets
The hummingbirds
have
vanished,
and, too,
the butterflies.
No rain
and the heat is
heavy,
like summer
in Morocco.
They found
Jimmy's body
by the pool
yesterday
after two
days
in the sun.
Eulalie died
by the tub,
three days gone
before we missed her.
Like finding
the bones of cattle
at a dried-up pond.
This drought
will not relent.
So why is it still
so green?
I had promised
Eulalie a call,
but the phone
just rang
and rang.
And Jimmy,
he was young.
He'd made a fortune;
hence, the pool.
I thought
there would be
time
for reunions
later.
I asked Kelly
if he'd play
"Old Man"
on his guitar
Friday.
I listened
and sang along,
remembering
that last long drive
in LA
when I mourned
my lost youth
and wished
I could hurry things
along.
And now
I miss
old friends
but hang on,
a stubborn Pagan
in a world
full of Christians
telling me
it's not too late
to be saved.
But it is.
Next time
I'll let it ring
and ring
until someone
picks up the phone.