Wonder Years
This is your prime time, grandson,
When you thrill to find bugs,
See birds and look at the moon,
Before your T-ball friends capture you
And take you to the land of cyberspace,
Pizza, movies and the mall.
Thank God for years of wonder
At the treasures of a kitchen,
Pots and pans to make a world
Of parades and pretending
Before you subscribe to boredom,
The required rite of teen-ageing.
Today you saw a flower blooming,
Your eyes gleamed with awe
As you said, “Let’s leave it here
To be beautiful for everyone who sees.”
I would wish to leave you here as well
So beautiful in your prime time.
A New Bookstore
Identity-deprived,
this symphony of syllables.
Coffee bar?
Haute deli?
Meeting place?
Clerks mechanically
take the treasure
with computer gaze and voice,
“Was-everything-all-right?”
calculate sales,
scanning screens
for inventory errors.
Where flawed?
Collections complete,
reading areas convenient.
Comfort must be worn
like a bedroom shoe.
This space is not molded to the fit,
Even more─
there is no reverence!
Genesis
Young in age; old in heartbreak,
Peering with fear from window screen
While highway headlights made
A boxcar procession, moving slowly,
Rotating in darkness on the wall.
His father never came that night at all.
The house emptied of contentment
With each bottle sip taken intentionally
To numb disappointment and resentment
Of years and lifetimes ago, a continuing
Cascading dose of pain unidentified.
The craving chemistry of brain
Must be sated, whatever price.
Love, family, future─ each sacrificed
To an insidious fluid of false promises─
Reducing pain to drunkenness.
All false! Tomorrow came with clinging light.
The hopeful child still crying in his night
Where reality became abandonment.
He left the window with resolution
To scramble in his chest of toys,
Digging for the bottle of his babyhood
Which he never threw away.
The Asparagus Bed Gone
Six broken steps remain
from summer days
sitting in the rain
waiting for the bus to town.
A heaved sidewalk leads
to where our house
once was wrapped by the porch
we learned to skate on.
Here sixty years ago,
short, wiry saplings waved.
Now trees, grass and shadows
frame a stately hemlock hedge.
The asparagus bed gone,
covered by mulched leaves and weeds.
Between our houses, the tennis court
now a garden with white wrought iron chairs.
Looping driveways still there,
but no bicycles racing over child-made obstacles.
Can you hear Monopoly arguments
Echoing from the side porch shade?
Mourners inside the house remaining pay respects,
looking out the wide front window
down the hill where we sledded
on one white Christmas morning.
Three houses built side by side,
one left standing like a loyal guard
in the middle of this mountain town.
We returned with longing
for voices and laughter and love
of adults who knew us from our beginnings.
None are here.
We have shifted generations.