Reading Komunyakaa
in the side yard
on a blanket
in spring time
before the world
as we know it began
where now,
out a kitchen window
three robins,
orange as orioles
shuffle & peck
for seed or worm
as in the next room
three boys play
whatever roles
suit the mood:
hero or villain
depending on
each moment’s
instinctual need
just as that after-
noon’s poem
might have been
“songs for my father”
in which fourteen
sections serve
to illuminate a
relationship I
avoided once &
hope with every-
thing to avoid again
on the flip: that
catastrophic love
some fathers give
their sons
& here,
this reminds that
there is some
sadness in, even,
spring: sometimes
a premature
nostalgia: things
change so quickly
it’s as if they are
already gone,
grown, gifted
away
like those three
birds, now replaced
by a gray sky,
clouded & lined
with the kind of change
that shakes blooms
& scares the fuse
into retreat
in all of this
there is a constant:
(besides anxiety)
her beside me,
though these
between change
the magnetism
& the magnitude
of opportunity:
after all,
this is still spring,
these our birds,
our boys, the
best defense
we have against
time & forgetfulness
Soon, I will search
the lost corners
of years for that
blanket
I’ve
already earmarked
the book to page 3.
Love this, the structure, the imagery, the themes, & especially the lines:
ReplyDeleteafter all,
this is still spring,
these our birds,
our boys, the
best defense
we have against
time & forgetfulness