BETWEEN CARROTS AND PEAS
Three of us work diligently pruning,
plucking errant weeds. We talk of
our pending lives away from cousins
and brothers, arguments, and beliefs.
The wind is strong and comes from trees,
blows around our feet, sleeves blouse
into wings, aprons puffed like balloons
feet turn into broad leaves.
We believe we are in an updated Oz.
The sun sends streams of light; we jump to catch
the ray as it begins its ascent. We fly with
butterflies, moths, a flying fish, a crow
slips into cluster. Bugs eaten by a wing.
A grandaddy’s long leg sizes up the adventure.
The only vestige of the future he sees is the place
now bare brown. The soil lonely for the cost.
.
DANCE OF WHITE PETALS
It was a stiff wind
blowing
the fates of time,
back and forth
over every rock,
thorn,
and branch.
We want to believe
that fate will
break for a breeze,
it looks more
like hope
than reality.
From my window,
the world
looks in crisis
especially
on white petals
like the innocents
who dance
in the Oz story.
The sing-song
blossoms haven’t
a chance
in this conundrum
of coil and curve
of wants and needs.
But they will sustain
breathing
smiling
when our loss
is too heavy
to swallow.
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