Thirty years after the sudden death of someone I didn't know terribly well, what remains? Not his name. Not quite his face, but something of his posture and physique. A strong impression of good-natured and thoughtful conviviality, based on possibly no more than half a dozen conversations, always on the periphery of punk shows. The shock and sadness of his death from a brain tumor. Someone who, on rare occasions when he pops into my head, still makes me smile, and shapes my memory of that whole period in my life. Good times. A good dude.
Wish I remembered his name.
***
fledgling cuckoo
flopping across the road
adoptive parents
nowhere to be found
poor little rain-crow
didn't mean to be a parasite
*
opening my umbrella
I spook a bear
in the depths of the hollow
widely spaced raindrops
water still gurgling
under the rocks
and the crashing of something big
in black velvet
upslope through woodferns
and storm-downed timber
*
a distant cuckoo singing
who are you you you
I know a lullaby
when I hear one
***
pine (k)not
***
One interesting residue of my long-ago year in the Kansai region is that humid rainy days in the summer still remind me a bit of Japan, not necessarily in a fully conscious way (which is why I call it a residue). Similarly, a snowy, cold winter day might have an extra charge of excitement and possibility to it from my early childhood years in Maine.
***
Just as I'm thinking of turning back to the house, a medium-sized animal clambers down out of an oak tree and stands for a few seconds looking back at me. It's been years since I've seen a gray fox. First time I've ever seen one in a tree, which seems odd, given their reputation as the most cat-like of canines. The clouds redden with sunset.
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