Notebook Poems (while downstairs)
with Psalms 34 and 35
Three O’Clock or Thereabout
train sounds out back
from the first floor
bells
deep, uneven thrumming
circles of wheels
train sirens cry and split the local sky
nostalgically, we might still call that
a whistle
after time, train finishes with us
our cars may go
ebb and flow returns to town
until Moses-like the tide of trains
halves us again
(haiku)
child at table works
lead pencil scratches paper
timely task now done
Psalm 34
a song of tears
Lord
hear my cry
and when I’m through
hear my chafed whispering
Psalm 35
song with a question
Lord, are you there
it’s not Margaret of the book
it’s simply unwritten me
Machine-Less Listening
I hear a trumpet call
shave-and-a-haircut-two-bits
(two bits a quarter from
pieces of eight)
Gabriel’s apprentice practices
for the final fanfare
at the end of school in June
Still-Listening
at table round I write
who knew Arthur should meet here
liege folk
talking of charity
T. H. White’s “Might for Right”
until Mordred and Lancelot
ruin everything
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