The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by William Page
Equinox at Stonehenge
There are sheep here and clouds above like wool of sheep and rumbling memory of wheels and motors in my head and sound of corrugated roofs struck with hail. But here the moon on invisible tracks rolls in behind the clouds bringing with it night swallows or their shadows.
I sit on the damp grass outside a mesh fence, breathing in and out the dark while my body and my mind float into to a dream of a dream I forget as I wake with the sun raising itself up toward a stone lintel that held a vision of ancients who had fed on field grain and drunk wine of grapes crushed by heels of mystics praising the passage of fire through the mist of morning between two giant upright stones.
Great as a god the sun elevates itself pushing up through the sky slowly anointing the earth with glow, a god coming forth to make the fields grow and the rivers shine, letting streaming winds come with rain and sometimes a rainbow.
Golden Rod & the Radiator
In fifth grade our teacher said she would be willing to discuss any part of the body. This gave us a lift. We all knew what she meant, but this was long ago. And we weren’t clinicians, didn’t know delicate words for peter and pussy, though we’d learned what kept Florida from breaking off into the ocean.
Mostly I studied the black hands slogging around a clock’s albino face. A girl brought yellow wild flowers so a boy could breathe in spasms. I was more interested in the girl’s growing breasts than in the history of Czechoslovakia. Life got a little interesting when the casement windows were wound out in Nazi salutes. We could hear wind rustling leaves and the sound of cars escaping. There was a tall boy who fell to the floor with fits. A pencil was put in his mouth to keep him from swallowing his tongue, but that didn’t last long.
Once during geography a bird perched on one of the tilted windows and pooped little feces for our amusement. Then the bird flew at an angle so low I could see it for a long time, till it shifted upward tucking its body into the sky.
There was a boy who delighted reading entries in the dictionary. What can I say of such a child? He’s dead now, and I’m drinking beer in The Red Dog, where words mean less than bills slipped in the stripper’s string.
In our schoolroom a radiator kept pis-pis-pis-ing steam as we calculated two trains’ meeting. Back then smoke of coal soot would have snaked behind, but I didn’t care if those trains were going to Hell or Hoboken.
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