|
|
The bearded space merchant from lil Idaho (Free verse) by Don-Quixote
There used to be
a crazy ole bearded grunt
who'd sit at the bus stop
takin deep drags off his
hand-rolled tobacco, picked
from the dry dust fields
of little Idaho.
He'd stay there
as if he found complete
and total peace- rain,
wind, hail, or snow couldn't
cause him discomfort, secure
in his little piece of Eden.
I loved to talk with him-
actually, I preferred listening.
He would tell me how he traveled
in a mental space rocket
and conducted trade on a planet
of highly evolved reptilian raptors.
He offered to take me there
for the bargain price of six hundred
greenbacks up front and four
after taking me home.
I know what you're thinking;
its a scam, an imaginative one.
But I swear folks, he was serious
insisting he didn't think in words
but in stars and space dust
which was how he bent time
and space with his lowly grey matter.
A common drunk seemed sober
compared to how this ole mans gears turned
without any medication legal or otherwise-
he only indulged in tar stained, toothpick sized
Idaho cigarettes.
Now there remains
just the smooth outline
of where he once sat
I've come to conclude that
he sat there waiting for his mental rocket
and somehow his ride finally arrived;
he's probably bargaining prices with raptors
on his favorite reptilian planet.
I couldn't go with him
not even if I wanted to;
we were simple men
of opposing dimensions.
Back to poem details
|