When the rain comes, I stare out into it and wish you were
here, and wonder what it might be like to be with you, out there, where old
leaves litter the ground and new leaves just begin to bud, unable to contain
the downpour fall leaves or those more in season might better handle, and I wonder
how it would feel to lay you down, both of us naked and drenched, having my way
with you, filling up each deep crevice as the rain drips off our lips and hips,
our hair drowned, our bodies smothered with each tender embrace, giving warmth
to each other against the still chill aftermath of early spring, what it might
feel like to smear each other, my wet body against yours, to kiss wet lips, to
press wet lips against wet lips, to drink an ambrosia only nature can provide,
and shudder, just to think of it.
Poems
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Rain in early spring April 8, 2015
the price we pay. Jan 31, 2014
we always pay for it in the end
we get you for a
moment
only to have the bill
come
always more than we reckon on
even when we knew the
cost
would come high
heartbreak the least of it
and for this I count
myself fortunate
and pity him, my friend and rival,
for the suffering he
has to endure
his love lost less than this mind
has and perhaps it is
because
of how much more he adored her
each of us the thieves to either side
of him on that hill
the one thief promised
redemption
for all the kindness
he gave
our suffering Christ
she one of the two Mary's we both desire
a Mary with two faces
each equally desirable
if for different reasons
My friend and rival forced to pay
the steeper price for
which I am grateful
I did not,
though down the I
seek to be him
to have been so kind
as to win that
special
piece of her heart
the man who knows
the right combination
to unlock it
and did
while I fumbled with
it
and lost it
and regret it
all this time later
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
Exotic spice April 5, 2025
The scent of it rises out of the unknown, an elusive fragrance
just on the edge of perception, a teasing touch I feel inside each time I
breathe, lost if I breathe too deeply, and yet I do, craving to get at it, to
have it wash over me, through me, yet it always remains teasingly distant,
refusing to be pinned down, like a humming bird with wings vibrating too quickly
to be seen, or captured, and so, as much as I crave it, I must cling to what I
have, not what it might become, always there, always beyond reach, yet
something I always reach for again and again, its scent evading me, like a spice
I taste in some elaborate dish, unable to precisely define what it is I taste,
and yet at the same time, knowing if I can catch the scent or taste it, I might
ruin it.
Old ghosts May 27, 2014
We pass this place where tall windows stick up around a wide
porch from those Victorian days where men with long cigars smoked, while inside
women displayed themselves like trophies, a place so notorious that angry wives
knew just where to go to collect their husbands, men who luckily knew the trick
how to get the big windows to open down so they could make their escape,
leaving naked women sprawled on couches still lingering on the edge of quick
romance, all these years later converted into a bed and breakfast, only
marginally haunted by those old ghosts, though in the dark of night, in the
rooms above, the bed posts still banged against walls and the sound of moaning
women can be heard downstairs, over the sound of waves crashing to the shore a
block away, nobody remembering the tricky windows, nobody trying to make a
quick escape, shaking the chandeliers the way an earthquake might, ending
finally with the cry of delight, as men make their way back down to the porch
to smoke cigars, history always managing to repeat itself
The ghost in the cupboard Nov. 10, 2012
I climb out of my cupboard to the vacancy beyond, the stairs absent her footsteps I so often strained to hear, all gone, and gone forever, not even the echo, only the remembrance of it, the clatter of her heals below, muffled by the carpet, yet still there, the hurried movement passed where I set, a pause, a moment, slightly above, to take stock of me and my attention, to determine if I cam looking or not, moving on when satisfied I am, while pretending not to.
I climb out of my cupboard because of hear none of that now,
only the footsteps in my head, and how I will neve hear it all again, for good
or bad, while the ache I feel remains, magnified by the lack of their reality,
my step replacing her step, just not the same, like a ghost who haunts this
place, and me, most likely forever condemned to carrying the links of chains I
have wrought, when all that has filled this space has gone on to fill some
other for someone else.
I climb out of my cupboard thinking I might be surprised somehow,
finding her footsteps still there, when I know they won’t be.
The texting habit April 2012
She texts me as I hang up the phone,
after talking for an hour,
her words reaching me
in the same way her
voice does,
stirring me up on the
inside
like renewed coals,
She saying how much she
Enjoyed talking to me
I tell her the same
fumbling over
the small keyboard
of my cell phone the way
I sometimes stutter
when
I'm embarrassed to speak,
each letter, word or more,
a painful exercise I need to complete
before I stumble off to sleep,
my response eliciting her to respond
my head already aching
for the soft embrace
of my pillow
while I ponder if she is as soft to touch,
my fingers throbbing as I text,
yet not from the effort of this conversation
, tingling in anticipation of what might be, could be,
and what she likely
feels like
if I do,
aching all the way down.
Pale Green April 4, 2025
The first pale green popups up, unceremoniously on the tree
in my back yard, too pale to be real, later leaves will come in darker shade.
It is this color this time of year I treasure, destined not
to endure, spring springing up as if out of nowhere, stirring me up inside as
well as out, a feeling rising out of the turf or a chill seas in shades I know can
last no longer than the green of these leaves does, the tendering linger with the
gradual rise of temperature, not yet the scalding heat we beat to life as we
plow into each other, too fragile to survive the scalding summer will later
bring, I treasure both, cling to this now for as long as it lass, then later
basking in the head, gripping that season, too, knowing it cannot last either, longer
yet, richer indeed, yet destined to fade as this does not, giving way later to
chill air and again the deep chill winter must bring.