prairie fever
windburst currents furrow prairie mounds
sweep Big Bluestem tallgrass into havoc
confuse Brown-eyed Susans into bowing
spell wet sheets on a line to bone dry
storm clouds, bruise gray, cells growing
charge atmosphere with ozone’s bleach aroma,
and lightning tongues…impersonal…predict
likelihood of a tornado’s visit
there…homesteaders fearing madness
from infinity of space and scarcity of talk
cling to one another…whisper prayers
and listen on the porch to cricket tremble
and await the onset of a prairie fever
Bonnie Marshall
Note: Prairie Fever, a mental health condition, occurred when homesteaders on the Great Plains endured limited contact with others.
if it were to be
if it were to be
it would be now…
surf the deep-sea wave
swelling the horizon…
lock to the moment…
signal for release
into a zone where shouts
and jet ski throttle
disperse to silence
plummet from the brink
down…down…down
as if a cable snapped…
rip the board against
a gathering sea wall
where sound becomes
white noise…then
thrumming of the plane
chih-chih, chih-chi
surf its kinetic change…
slant horizontal left
mere seconds in the barrel…
spit through for chase and beat down
in whitewater crashing far from shore
he now is…
surface spent in foam
awed to awareness core
complete in a being moment
prompt of circumstance
Bonnie Marshall
she dares her world
a red geranium
once on her windowsill
dries to lifeless
in the rain barrel
withers like their chickens
and their cows
and their children…
long Kansas drought
where anything with lungs
breathes dusty air
and infants cough brown spots
and locusts gnaw ax handles
and black-widow spiders
spin erratic webs
beneath dresser drawers
as Oklahoma…Texas
blow from dirt horizons
break to silting layers
sift finely into slits
through doors and roofs and windows
muffle sounds…drift into mounds
when John enters from the barn
she swears he breathes dust smoke
through his pale cracked lips…
he says wind makes her crazy
not crazy…
she slips behind a screen
confirms there is no red
from a monthly flow
dreams of April
and prairie grass
spreading green again
across the gray…
and dares her world to blow away
Bonnie Marshall
Artwork by Joan Fullerton
Well done Bonnie…>Smiles KB
Appreciate your comment,KB. Smiles…
Amazing. I’m going to have to study up on prairie fever. I had no idea. Learning while appreciating fine poetry!
Thanks, Nancy. Yes, there’s cabin fever, too. People amaze me with their courage–I realize you know that. Smiles…
Jewels cracking tight with electricity.
I treasure your comment,Simon. Smile.
two dry places, one wet one. all of the people trying to survive in hostile situations. the one figure that seems to me most courageous (and the most sympathetic) is john’s wife. i think she could be the protagonist of a novel. she breaks my heart. in any case, three works from a skilled poet willing to take risks.–michael
Most grateful for your insights, Michael, always so valued by me. I’m in awe of the frontier spirit, of the courage to commi, to show true grit. Smile.