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Birdcalls (Free verse) by poetandknowit
I want to speak of rivers I
regret not knowing.
Because it is October again
and the hazy morning chill
gathers light from my last
youthful days, when I awoke from
a hunter's sleep, shotgun aimed
stiff against a vacant sky,
wishing my father had remembered
coffee some miles back and hours
ago, when I still believed in magic
bird calls and conjured V-lines,
when a pocketknife belonged against
the left hip for luck
and a fallen leaf, shaded deep red,
meant more than a dollar bill.
And I recall my daughter now,
hair laced with hay strands from
an earlier wagon ride,
searching an endless pumpkin field
for a faultless face, her grace
balancing an oversized coat, as she
patiently inspected each round shape.
And the horse meadow outside Platte City,
thick with hog flies, where I wanted to
spend my life with you before learning to kiss,
before the mysteries of moving water
stilled at winter's pass
and the days became cold.
And maybe a drink would slow things,
but I keep thinking of you
and of all those rivers,
but mostly of you.
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