The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Robert Joe Stout
Seventy
Boggled by the way his limbs and eyes responded to the need to move he poured water, measured coffee, fed the cat, cup in hand stretched by the open window
blinking as a view of hills gauzed by slithering clouds quivered into focus. Good morning he repeated momentarily wishing there were someone there to share then glad there wasn’t: In his lifetime he had shared enough.
Two wives, five children, countless dogs and cats and birds and fish, houses in how many cities? Jobs and clients, bosses, editors’ complaints
. . . now just the sunrise twinkling color onto church domes glistening through recumbent pines and coffee, dark roast, freshly brewed, no one to give him orders, tell him hurry! crowd into his space
he nodded, laughing as the clouds, evaporating, formed expressions he remembered: despondent lovers, snarling cops, bed-ridden mom, and slowly rising he looked skyward, whispered to the morning What a joy to be here all alone. Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |