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11. Rain
You know, I love the rain but..
sometimes, enough is enough,
like when it wakes me early, with a roaring
like a dozen tornadoes, then I know it’s pouring:
when it washes away the newly laid topsoil,
when it floods basements, threatens the dam,
makes homeless people seek unwanted shelter,
(me? I hate being forced to stay inside)
causes people to run in the streets helter-skelter,
promotes fistfights over scarce taxicabs without reason,
makes me abandon a picnic or a bicycle ride,
scan the ads for vacations out-of-season,
eat too many cappuccino-dipped doughnuts,
(I know! I said I loved it, but I lied)
or bath the dogs before they’re due, sorry, mutts.
Resonant last line in "Rain," capping a list of madcap details.
Nice variety of fun/serious makes this really enjoyable. I particularly liked Priscilla & Charybdis, and bits of country music were brilliant.
We get big tides down here too- I learned how to spring-tether when I was young, but to this day embarrassment hangs Damoclesian over me when boating, so I love the alluded shaudenfreude in Ebb and Flow... Soldier on!
Hey - I really enjoyed 'Rain' - poems often do best observing the ordinary.
Resigned
12. The Wonder of S/He
In the still waters of the Coral Sea
on any summer night, is there a starfish
clinging to a sea mount who can see
through the transparent ceiling
of his watery domain, the stars above?
In her mollusc brain, still a billion neurons
or so, does she conceive the wonder
of her undersea universe and believe
that some starfish God created it?
Does that brainy mollusc, when the sea is like glass
and the stars come out, like the venerable Kant,
stand in awe of the starry skies above
and the starfish moral law within?
Hello! I iike the premise here. It's almost the reverse of The Dead by Billy Collins, where the spirits look down on us from above. I wonder what the starfish would make of a row boat full of us eejits just above its head?
Resigned
There but for the Grace of Cod go I.
I just learned before writing that that starfish, while not true hermaphrodites, can assume either gender as necessary,
which yields many more options on a Saturday Night!
Thx for reading, 5th.
G.
13. Migration
The wildebeest mass at the water’s edge,
the picture of stoicism and trepidation.
It is true they are here randomly,
but they are not here by chance.
They have to cross; there’s no grazing left here.
Yet some will die. Some will have seen the crocs before,
and still they hesitate, even though they know the score.
If they know terror as they see the croc’s jaws gape
As they plunge on, can they expect to find escape?
There is milling and uncertainty, among the massive group
Kept all together by kinship, but does any one know hope?
14. Valkyrie II
Venus brightly shines and hangs by rusty Mars.
Valkyrie has flown out there near on ninety months.
Its passengers signed on for death by distant stars.
The twin umbrellas of the ship are merely far-off specks.
Thrice a hundred trillion miles they've travelled now,
such a distance is better measured in parsecs.
All lives they know here on Earth are out-of-reach
At twenty-five per cent the speed of light she flies
Any hope of re-connecting has vanished in the breech.
What knowledge they have hoped to gain out in the vast
unending depths of space from orbs that fly round distant suns
will vanish as they die, and long be in their past.
Though Valkyrie will venture on to unimagined spheres,
the packet they send home is for our great-grandsons,
as it won’t make it back to planet Earth for many years.
***
The Valkyrie One poem
Source of The Valkyrie Concept: picture
Gefof, love the description of the coral sea as seen from the starfish's perspective, and love the alluded correlation it might conceive between star & fish. Migration brought to mind this cartoon, but other videos show how incredibly resilient and tenacious the beasts are. Does the Valkyrie II probe exist, or is it still conceptual (the laser-accelerated probe, right?). Anyway, nice to explore its isolation and loneliness. Charge on!