NINTH
The September sky:
It’s not quite blue anymore –
Washed out, actually.
Miniscule red bug
Crawling across my paper,
Savor the sunlight.
Sitting in the grass
As summer draws to a close,
OCTOBER
That darkened street,
And the streetlamp – orange,
The smell of snow was on the air.
Your hair was down and loose
And you ran
As fast as you could down the road.
So much energy.
Your fingers buzzed with it.
Boundless energy and laughter
And secrets.
You were always running then
Laughing then dancing then
Playing then wishing then
Living, then.
Where are you now?
On this cold October street
Under this orange streetlight?
No.
You are gone with The October,
That one so long ago.
You chose a different path,
A different Creation that wasted you.
But you knew what you were leaving behind,
And you went willingly.
I ask you now,
Do you have any regrets?
REACHING
The leaves are all
Fallen. Finally, October
Has ended. Nothing
Good has ever come
From that month, and
I escaped
Unscathed
This time. But
Now October
Has grown arms, and
It can reach
Me here. In
The safety of November
The memories return.
Why? Where will
I find peace? And
When will I
Be freed from this
Past nightmare?
Where do I go to
Hide from my
Own soul? Can
It be done when
BORN FREE
In no way could I tell you the truth now.
I dare not break your heart more than I have.
I was not made to bend and scrape and bow
At husband’s feet till I’m laid in the grave.
I love the wind, the sky, the earth, and rain,
The lightning and thunder, the burning sun.
They bid me follow them again,
To this rough-hewn valley I now call home.
You would not - you could not - follow me here.
You are content to stay just where you are,
Living in suburbia year after year,
Where city lights make invisible stars.
If you’d go with me, would I let you come?
WASATCH
This forest, these hundred-foot cottonwoods,
They tower over everything –
Powerful, majestic, eternal.
Deadly.
It was here, among the trees,
On this sweeping green lawn,
In the lush, wild, untamable forest,
With the clear cold creek running by.
It is here where we lost
Our wife, our mother, our grandmother.
And here where we lost
Our daughter, our sister, our cousin, our granddaughter.
They were wise and fair,
Beautiful as the roses
For which they were named,
And, like roses, too soon cut down.
See that towering cottonwood there?
One hundred feet, at the most.
The one that killed
Was even taller.
We’re not afraid of these trees,
Not anymore.
Year after year after year
We return to remember – to immortalize.
It’s been ten years now.
The two young memorial trees
Are growing strong,
A beautiful flowerbed at their feet.
It is here where we return
To remember their lives – not their deaths.
We plant those flowers for them –
Because they want us to live.
They want us to live like this forest,
Green and growing, alive, eternal.
The trees and us – our roots go deep.
1 comment:
Amazing poet, you are.
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