Scarecrow Dreams
If by night I move without aid,
what then? Precious flesh, precious
bone, never mine to lose – the difference
between nothingness and no thing. A
pity that my friends fly at the merest
movement, but when the air’s breath
stills, they sing and rattle among the
grain, scribing their days in song
and footprints, seeking the available
on the ground. And what scrolls lower
than the sound of sunflowers turning?
The laughing daughter runs around
my lattice spine, scattering joy like so
many seeds, and when my hollow
fingers clench, the earth quivers, or
so it seems. Then midnight returns
and I disengage and stalk about,
scaring rodents and their predators,
hooting in harmony with the owls
reveling in the night air, remembering
the holy shirt, a yellow glove, corn
silk’s gleam at noon and the warmth
of your fingers against my burlap skin.
I do not breathe, I say, but I exist. By
morning what joins me but the tune
of yet another bird, unseen, melodious,
the pulse of morning’s dew. Eternity.
How my straw tongue longs to sip it.
“Scarecrow Dreams” first appeared in the summer 2017 edition of Eclectica. Many thanks to poetry editor Jen Finstrom, for publishing several of my scarecrow poems.
I like this poem very much, particularly these lines:
And what scrolls lower
than the sound of sunflowers turning?
Eternity.
How my straw tongue longs to sip it.
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Thank you, Liz. Scarecrow is quite the philosopher!
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You’re welcome, Bob. He sure is!
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I’ve been reading a lot of short, intellectually abstract Dickinson lately, and then this morning I read this one f yours and bask in its sensuousness.
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I dunno how I missed this comment, Frank, but thank you!
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Scarecrow is always welcome in my reader!!
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He seems to pop out just when I need him!
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