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SIXTEEN THOUSAND SEVEN HUNDRED AND TWENTY DAYS
Poetry should be read aloud
on a river bank facing the direction
of the flow
With a black dog groaning his dreams
lounging in golden-haired grasses
head on your feet
With a fisherman knee-deep in a sparkling
riffle laying out his snaking lines like unfurling
a bolt of silk
My lover lies dreaming golf dreams
hand over his heart seven iron leaned
against a tree
While caddis dance their swarm
of love knowing just what to do
if you've awakened
With but weeks to live:
Love up every minute
till you die
My lover says he doesn't relate
to poetry because it makes him think
too hard
And yet he makes his golf game
into an art form brings a practice club here
to the riverbank
And yet he watches the river
to understand the feeding patterns
of trout
And yet he knows the river races
through our veins and the moon counts
our heartbeats when we
Shine each other's skin until we howl
That feels a lot like poetry
to me.
© Joan Barton, 2002
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