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SUMMER SOLSTICE

A Summer Solstice poem
translated from a Northern Druid lay
circa 645-715 CE

It is the Summer Solstice
The crowning of the Light
The greatest day
To sing and play
And share the Spirit's flight

And in this longest lightness
Rejoice in sound and sight
This summerous day
Shall pass away
Returning to the Night

MAYBE I BELIEVE

Maybe I do believe in love
And it is desire that I need to avoid
But isn't desire one of the main ingredients
In the stew of love?
Or maybe what's wrong is the payoff
That goes sour
Poisoned by time
Or the fire that dwindles
The unmet expectations
The contempt of familiarity
Maybe I believe in chemistry
Devoid of meaning
Yet alive with delight
And possibilities

Binge-watching

a terza rima

Our senses one by one we strive to glut
As though excess alone could make us feel.
So gorge we greedily to pad our gut

Or drink as if some awful wound to heal.
Then, envious of other sense, the eyes
Demand their due and stare, with fervent zeal

At flick’ring screens, both large and small in size
To binge-watch all our precious TV shows—
Meanwhile a little something in us dies.

So every act shall harvest what it sows.

Bruise

I smashed my finger
The middle finger
The flip-off finger that was left nameless
After Pointer and Pinky and Ring
Got all the good names

Anyway, I smashed that finger
— let's call it Clint,
"The Finger With No Name" —
Smashed it like a Talking Cricket
Gets smashed with a mallet

Except my finger — Clint —
Got smashed between a
Window sash that I was raising
And a thin strip of wood
Nestled into the curtain

So thin and seemingly harmless
That strip of wood but it
Felt like a dull machete blade
Crunching down on the fingernail

I hopped about grunting and wheezing
Until my kid asked if I wanted to
Swear which I very much did
But I didn't

That was three weeks ago
And Clint's nail —
Blood purple and visibly
Decomposing —
chips and flakes, snagging on
My pocket hem when I reach
For the keys

It fills me with dread
Like a loose tooth
When I was small
It must come off
It will come off
I hate to think of it
I cannot stop

And even now
The new nail grows in
Warped and scarred
Like a grizzled, old actor
Well past his glory years
But still in the fight

UNCLE MILLARD AND THE DARKNESS

What color would you lay down first?
Uncle Millard, the black sheep of the family
The drunk, the brilliant mind, the wasted life
A streak of cruel
Masquerading as absurdity
The drink, always the drink
And a degree in commercial art

Never dangerous or cruel to me
He had no friends
And I loved him
For his dangerous absurdity
His friendless austerity
Because he saw me as a person
Not a child
And for his art

It was not so much in his works
They were scant
But in the way he saw things
(Including, of course, me)
And the way he talked of things
As if we were equals
As if I understood

On a rare visit we stood on his porch
And drank in the suburban night
Redolent with city noise
And pools and points of light
What color would you lay down first?
Around us was the dark, warm and embracing
Black, I replied
Black because it is night
He smiled his Uncle Millard smile at me
And called me Muscles For Brains
A loving term dripping with absurdity
Yellow, he said, you would lay down yellow
Then we took a secret walk to his secret store
To buy more liquor

He never explained why the yellow
I never visited again
He moved on, down a darkening path
To his appointment with sadness
And a failing liver
I got his furniture and a photo
But never an explanation

Decades passed
Occasional flashes of that suburban night
Pricked with electric incandescence
Forgotten brush strokes, an empty bottle
Until one day a friend, an artist
Invited me to the garden to paint bright flowers
You lay down the background color first, she told me
Then apply the other colors over it

My flowers and trees that day were pathetic
I had never painted before
Or understood the quiet strength of underneath
Or Uncle Millard
Drowning in alcohol, crying in the night
With brush and form and thought
And the unknown song of his heart
He had told me the secret when I was a child
That we lay down the light
And cover it with darkness

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