The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Charles Patrick Norman
I wake to the songs of birds outside my small window. To the east Blue clouds turn pink, the sky brightens with the coming dawn.
From a storm drain a young cat creeps, feral, velvet black, white feet, fixated on the singing bird above.
Floridas true orange, the sun, bursts forth above the distant tree line, a symphony of light.
Clear beams illumine cropped green fields beyond And rouse bees from sleep to tend the clover.
Such pastoral calm is blemished solely by the grumbles of gun trucks Securing the prison within.While the Music Plays Let Us Dance
Some things should not be left to chance; Why should those with youth lay claim to love? While the music plays let us dance.
We've lived and learned from circumstance; With age should we lose all hope for love? Some things should not be left to chance.
Across the room you risked a glance; The angels whispered from above, While the music plays let us dance.
Romance is not extravagance; Holding hands is not enough. Some things should not be left to chance.
Together our lives have substance; Shallow youth pales in our new love. While the music plays let us dance.
We will not yearn for past remembrance; Or store regrets for long-lost love. Some things should not be left to chance. While the music plays let us dance.
Good Intentions, Undone
The boy followed the meandering dog, a little red dog with pointed ears and playful eyes, curled tail, trotting away from the country house, beneath a barbed wire fence across a field, sniffing a rabbit trail through high grass, pink tongue lolling, leading him away from home.
The child looked back once, expecting trouble from his mother, get back in the yard, boy, where do you think you're going? Do you want to get snakebit, or fall in the creek? But the back porch was empty, just a gray cat sleeping in a rocking chair, silently assenting, go ahead, a sign, no one there to tell him no.
An abandoned barn beckoned, weathered wood falling from rusted hinges, door planks sagging, scant shelter from wind and rain, sheet metal roof gapped open to the sky, shadows moving across the hay-strewn dirt floor, corn cobs scattered, gnawed by mice, immigrants claiming empty spaces where Grandma once milked cows long gone and forgotten.
The cool woods called the red dog, sprinkling odd tree trunks leading downward toward Nettles' Creek, dark water curving, little boy following, sitting on the grassy bank, content to dangle bare feet, splashing, scattering minnows as the dog tiptoed across wet clay preserving tracks of birds and animals, a raccoon, lapping, thirst slaked, child crossing, tracking, soft clay squishing, warm between his toes.
Above, among the leaves a blue jay scolded, Warning off a fox squirrel wary of the dog below, sniffing strange scents, unconcerned with nervous chittering, satisfying olfactory cravings while the boy discovered the blackberry patch, ripe berries waiting to be picked and eaten by little boys, juice staining lips, leaving telltale purple streaks.
Deeper into the woods, dog and boy encountered an old cowpath, narrow, worn deep from years of plodding bovines set in their ways and trails, curving around long-dead trees fallen, returned to dust, the red dog decided, turned left, continued through sparse underbrush, trees thinning, sunlight shining on the fallow pasture, quail covey startled into flight.
At the barbed wire fence the dog looked back, as if to say, hurry up, boy, we made it home, undiscovered by your mom, I'll lie on my back while you scratch my belly, like we've been here all along. Good plans go awry, sometimes, even good intentions of little boys and dogs, undone by little things like blackberry stains and red clay dried between bare toes.
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