From Winamop.com

Poems
by Diane Webster

 

 

Summer Picture

 

A hot air balloon

blasts its flame

inside a multi-colored

envelope rising.

 

With not even a bark

the black and white dog

trots across the grass

on its doggie mission

led by tongue taste.

 

Brown-stripped tabby cat

crouches in a shadow

beneath bush branches

unseen by doves

strutting like a king

escorting his queen

 

until a boy wearing

a blue T-shirt

races by flying doves,

unpouncing the cat

with an ear flick

that decides a dream

would be more productive,

 

and the hot air balloon

lifts off like a fluff

of dandelion riding

wind’s destination.


 

 

a line, (a short one)

 

 

Little Girl Drops

 

When one on one she drops the little girl “act”

of anything we say or do toward her.

She apologizes so much we want to smack

her on the back and yell, “Stop being so wimpy,”

but face to face her opinions crab out

in selfish spirals of judgment

like pushing another in a mud puddle

and laughing until Mom arrives,

and “real” tears stream down her cheeks.

 

The mud puddle victim is forgotten

in all her dripping glory in the eyes

of the “I’m sorry” little girl smiling

over the shoulder of her hugging Mom,

and it’s hard not to fist a ball of mud

and missile it toward the little girl.

 

 

 

a line, (a short one)

 

 

Dislocation

 

Earthquakes – when liquid in ears

surf to the other side, and vertigo wobbles

a moment of dislocation like turning the light switch

off at night and darkness rushes claustrophobic close

until the alarm clock numbers focus in.

 

When big kids held me up on the teeter totter,

then dropped me almost to the ground;

my stomach met as I flew to a standstill

again at the apex of the big kids’ laughter.

 

When my sister and I begged Dad to go fast

on the back road home where a bump

in the road lifted us from the back seat

and bounced us back into giggles and pleas

to turn around and do it again.

 

When crossing a creek, but the rock

I chose lived up to its name and rocked

my gravity back and forth between

wet and dry, left and right, upright, downfall;

no location exists that can’t be dislocation.

 

 

 

a line, (a short one)

 

 

She Sits At Attention

 

Like a ship unshackled from dry dock

the woman and her scooter sail sidewalks;

the American flag unfurls with speed

and wind bends its pole

like fathoms-deep fish caught and fighting.

 

The captain woman’s cowboy hat tugs

at her forehead but never releases its grip

as she anchors near the canal’s bridge,

rushing, lapping water soothes her ears

as dampness breathes into her lungs

like memories conjured from the past.

 

With an admiral’s stare she reviews

the maiden-voyage of ships in cars

on the freeway passing her parade dais,

and when her duty is done,

she reverses her course

and docks her scooter at home port.

 

 

 

a line, (a short one)

 

 

Gutter Growth

 

Below the building’s eave

I grow in the gutter,

an eavesdropper blown

across the roof to find refuge

in silt built up

of improper drainage, neglect.

 

Grass grows tall

like a sentinel above the trench,

a ready target for sharp shooters.

 

I am a vine snipper crawling

stealthfully along silt.

When rain bursts forth,

I hold my breath or peek

over the edge

to catch a breath.

 

In time, the building is surrounded,

and I rappel down the walls

capturing, imprisoning all inside.

 

 

a black line

 

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