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Smoky Mountain High (Free verse) by Dovina

A river rolls along, slow in orange afternoon haze Sun rises a ball of red in Mississippi Valley Folks there hardly notice or think it strange when summer follows rain Meanwhile, for all those swollen bushes briars, brambles and weeds overwatered, drying fast on San Gabriel slopes likely come summer’s answer— hot pink evenings orange nighttime ridges lovely in firestorm glow when ashes of burned lives fall like rain and sun rises bloody, unfamiliar in yellow murk and we’ll not call it ebb or flow or rain’s result but think it strange

DoubleU 6-Jun-05/3:53 PM
'in orange afternoon'... well, you can't blame me for viddying a sun on his way to beddy-bed. I now see what you mean, but in the first part there is no hint at bushfires whatsoever. And to be honest, the reference in the second part escaped me as well. I saw the 'firestorm' as a metaphore. Don't ask me which one.
But don't put any more explanantories in, it's nice the way it is. (perhaps 'Smokey Mountain High' is a set phrase for burning hillsides?)




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