Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Mama Cat


While walking down the hall
of a greeting card company
I passed a crateful of kitties
being carted away for their close-up.
There were eight in all,
plus their gray mommy
who was wrenching her head
in every which-way direction
making sure her youngins were safe
from harm —
from the humans
ooing, awing, and loving
all over her offspring.
And of course they were, safe.
(The admirers were women who make
birthday cards for a living, after all.)
But mama just kept looking over her shoulder,
her eyes wide, alert, watching.

Because, you know,
a mother always worries.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

The Poem About the Razor's Edge


The Irish Barber
had an assistant
who liked to talk
to his wife
as he cut hair
with a special shiny
straight razor.
And as talking
became arguing,
shaving became
butchering,
and I left the shoppe
short a half-pound
of flesh.
But up one bad haircut.

Monday, September 14, 2009

The Poem About the Nest


When the winds of change
are so great
they knock a bird’s nest free
from the safe and cozy hold
of a downspout
elbowing against a house,
what does the bird do then?
She gathers twigs, of course.


Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Haiku #5



Hot and sticky day,

heart as free as a child's,

every day summer.