He used to walk the property at dusk;
now I do, too—not because he did,
but because I understand why. He
walked around the barnyard, observing,
checking things that mattered: his horses
in their stalls, a piece of siding missing
from the barn, the size of the hay supply,
water levels in the horses’ tanks, old tractor
in its bay, the horse trailer, the trucks.
I walk the front yard, seeing what is there:
the rose transplanted yesterday, another
planted days before, progress of the weeds,
soil softened by chipmunks, entrance
of the first iris buds, a bumblebee at rest,
the youngest cat stalking blades of grass
in the last light, unwilling to let the day go.
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12 comments:
Beautiful, Susan. Thank you.
Lovely. Sigh.
Beautiful, Susan.
Hauntingly descriptive - I felt as if I were walking with you and seeing what you saw...
Dolores
Thank you. I wrote this a few springs ago. Now here we are with this year's spring behind us. Hard to believe it's August already.
It is beautiful. I thought you just wrote it ... "the youngest cat" :)
Crystal, thank you. That was Pogo. The current "youngest cat" isn't allowed out among the blades of grass. :-)
Breathtaking!
Thanks, Dona!
I love it Susan.
I also like your new photo...
Thanks, Helen. I was having a good hair day for a change. (When I took the picture, not when I wrote the poem.) :-)
Really lovely, Suze. Most of us were blogging less (because of effing Facebook) so I stopped checking your blog very often. I'm out of Facebook now. It's an evil cult! But I'm blogging again. :-)
I read your post about that drug. I'm starting to have a great deal of sympathy for people who worry about "Big Pharma." --love to you as always
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