Because I could not stop for air, I learned
that someone there is that doesn’t love birdsong.
Even though I live in this pretty how town,
there’s a fire somewhere else, not far from here,
or will be, and even though on the porch railing
there’s sun tea brewing as gold as the runaway
St. John’s wort that’s strangled the wild clematis,
I know that articulated buses in Seattle are still taking
the corners like ambling geriatric caterpillars,
and the boy at the inn in Taxco is still sweeping
the dirt and watching the revolving flirty young girls,
and the green piñata spills broccolini, sugar peas,
and organic grapes on the baby’s tears,
and the two-trunked oak threatens to split,
to send its wider leg crashing into the copse
of native dogwood, and day after day
the water’s edge warns and invites.
When the robot neurologist via video asks the patient
to raise his arms, his right leg, his left leg,
the patient cannot,
and I picture Lewy bodies as other planets,
other stars that died dark years ago.
At the end of the day I go to sleep, except when I don’t,
and last night star jasmine and linden blossoms
sweetened the air as one airplane, red lights pulsing,
and one satellite sailed north by northeast
on the open sky road.
Published in the June 2023 issue: View Contents