The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Patric Pepper A TRIP TO THE FARMERS' MARKET down U.S. 220 and Bald Eagle Mountain, past Tyrone, Through Altoona, on to Bedford, over the dashed line toCumberland and into West Virginia, The Dodge Neon and I drifted like a memory of Grandma Moses, while the Cubist Brain and I ran it all over again and again because our quaintelicious 21st century visions were like The spectacle of roadkill, albeit maybe not so bloody: First, while the actual Appalachians waited Like a North American Gaia Mama for the Night Sky to descend in intercourse, We noticed how pointlessly Pointillistic appeared the accidents of Cumberland architecture, even As the yards of discombobulated ramshackletude were the essence of Concrete Expressionism; and how Shaker-pure shone the Neo-Classic steeples in the valleys, sometimes like Mother, Sometimes like Jehovah; and here the brain would have me mention how Bentonesque were the manly farms Plowing and flowing and growing our girls—casting our buteefull babes—into young women, and our young Women into soldiers to defend our just causes.Like a memory of an old home place, we three scribbled Past a renaissance of surely Colorist yard sales and a whitewash sign, "Bewhere the Dawg ☺"—I peered on and The Neon rolled and the brain imagined our return to the cottage by the pond, near the sea, off the map, to you. P STREET BRIDGE IN THE 70’s I saw them hug once, beneath the bridge, In August, two men kiss in their embrace, Each hold the charm of love against the law, In would-be secrecy, maybe in shame, Maybe never having told a parent, And though it's romantic, though I'm naive, It buoys me to believe that love saved them. And though love didn't at the end of ends, Certainly salvation rose around them Then; think of a crucible and furnace, Where all that is is fire, metal, slag— Slag ladled off leaving purities. I watched them, secretly, two men embrace In eternity, underneath that bridge. Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |