Oceans Mary
With
The prince of tides
by john cla55
they never told me
you were one of the
mean girls
it would have been
nice had i known
now it is perfectly
clear to me
why the rejection
and here I thought
it was just some
imperfection in me that
kept me trying by
scoring touchdowns
sinking baskets
knocking fly balls
all in vain
when all along
your interest lay
in trailer courts
in melon fields
cheap dates in
sand hill backseats
grinding all the way
singing sweetly
coming Sunday
tears streaming freely
repenting again
for mean girls sin
again and again
but they do not cheer
nor do they care
for the boy who
bought his Wilson ball
up the Devil's court.
It was a palatable pathos
Bourne upon the living
Upon others dreams
Guiding them safely in
To lovers awaiting anxiously
Of the ever gazing over the
Horizon for some imagined
Ship to arrive from distant seas
Bearing treasures to ease
This life of misery
The light upon every revolution
Piercing for a moment her
Darkness
Illuminating the limpid eyes
Tears long since dried
The dark moment a welcome
Soothing interlude
May Day
Ever get into a May Day sort of way?
It starts out like any other day
Then at the full glass door they come
And you stare, then open
Letting in the guests again
The ones you threw out
The night before
And they in the morning over coffee
Resume the tormenting
You can’t get a word in
A fly lands upon the rim and falls in
What the hell (is this)
You swallow him
Listening
Buzzing all the way down
Hayfield tractor operator
Summer
Watermelons
Summer
Williston Memorial Hospital
Maintenance
Cleveland Heights Methodist
Lakeland
Dishwasher
Williston Memorial Hospital
Maintenance
Powers Service
Lake City
Service advisor
Warranty clerk
Parts
Fired
Lake City Reporter
Photographer
Darkroom tech
Laid off
Jones and Presnell
Traveling store photographer
Sylvia,NC
Quit
JCPenney
Display advertising
Merchandiser
Assistant Mgr
Fired
Sears
Commissioned sales
Store closed
Florida Power and Light
Meter reader
Temp one year
Baya Medical
DME tech driver
Fired
Morgan Group
Photographer
Outsourced
Porter
Stroke
Probably no more jobs
They said, what good was all this photography?
This obsession with image
He could not answer
He was too busy framing
Back focusing to that first time
In that Wacahoota field
With the camera along
Knowing that from now on
He and Nikon would not be alone.
Tonight I'm stoked for the Rollei Steve Stafford gave me with light meter. Steve did all his early wildlife photography with this camera. He acquired it in 1964 from Dale Crider who at the time had purchased a Pentax SLR and was throwing it in the trash at the Game Commission.
No hill to die on
Each time I see these old geezers struggling up hills, I think of my friend Roger and his slow zig zag up, never walking the bike up, then his later fast gliding down the other side, leaving us, until the next hill.
Roscoe I said, load up. I didn’t really need to tell him. He watches and knows the cues. Cameras in hand, keys off the refrigerator jingling. He’s already at the door waiting. I don’t know what his excitement is, the smells, the scraps, the territory to mark. We arrive and after the preliminary scouting out, settles for the patient looking up as the photographer waits idly by.
I suppose like me, just being idle is enough.
We pulled off the beaten way interstate on our journey from this fair Floridian state, the roar of the ocean fading. As we loaded back in toward Alabama, there in the window she was calling. It was a tortuous journey away.
It's not the height of woke outdoor fashion, we can spot them a mile down trail, wide brim sun flapping khaki hat, eye hiding Oakley's of course, vented, various elite safari or fishing poplins, the endless cargo pocketed pants with infinite zips, the Chuuka's or Teva's or whatever sandal is the vogue. The rope belt got me across the Robinson branch once, but mostly it just holds the pants up. I'm sure it's a yuppie woke thing, but the split leather I forgot to bring.
Aurelia D Wallace
Because I can't remember
What I had for lunch, they
Think I'm getting senile.
I hear them whispering
About the Shady Elms.
Good God, I'm not ready
For Shady Elms! I can
Still read Greek, I know
The whole score of Lucia,
(Though they don't take me
To music anymore, since
I've had to wear these paper
Pants). I can make Martha Washington's
Own recipe for Sally Lunn,
Without once peeking. I can
Recite the names and birthdays of all
Nine grandchildren, and I know
Franklin Roosevelt is dead.
All they ask me, though,
Is my street number backwards
And what I had for lunch, what
Day it is. Of course I know
Where I live, silly: inside these bones,
This bag my skin. No none needs
To know what I know anymore.
How is it they don't know
All days are Sunday--
As long as I can breathe
This splendid, cautious air?