Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Out Here




Out Here


I said to my shape, “Shape up!”
did three push ups, four knee
bends, five sit ups with toes
locked under the edge of the low
table in front of my Lazy Boy
recliner that holds my books
I hope someday to read.

I even walk down our lane
unless it snows or rains.  Or if
I forget and day wanes into dark.  
It’s not safe then where rumor
has it a cougar was spotted last
week after the neighbor’s poodle
(or was it a pug?) turned up missing
and hasn’t since been seen.

It’s a great life we live out here
in the cottonwoods.  Except in June
when cotton cloaks the land and every
seventeen years incessant cicadas sing.  
Well, it’s not exactly song, more like
a buzz or thrum.  You can tell
the Fahrenheit by counting thrums
for fifteen seconds then adding thirty-seven,
or is it thirty-five?  

You can look it up next time
you Google on the Internet.  
You can even find your long
lost love at Harmony dot com. 
But that’s nothing to me.
My love sleeps snug beside
me or alone when I get up
to shape my shape, or if the sky
is clear enough to write this poem.

                              Donnell Hunter
                                        17 January 2012  

2 comments:

  1. I awake [for the second time, something I can beat you doing. Try 3:00]. No poem, yet. Now that it's 7:00 in balmy Texas I see Bogie in all his winter wear and wonder. Those cicadas--I do not think they will sing to me. I have little energy to shape the shape that was once a shape on the far flung courts of the Hart Bldg. Cougars? As we say here in Austin, "they don't scare me none." It's that white wolf I'm a search for.

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    1. I stopped at the English department on my way home from the Temple and there in the foyer was your 16 x 20 face next to the photos of four student recipients of the Larry Thompson scholarship award. Congratulations to them and to you. Visited with Kendall a little. He looks just like his dad (except a hundred pounds lighter).
      I wrote the poem for today late. It flirts with the sacrilegious a bit, but as I worked with the lines and the syllable count, some of the problems of the poem went away.

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