A Dominance of Lines

 

 

Snap_the_Whip_1872_Winslow_Homer (1)

In Spring, when Aeolus breathes
across their farms, girls boys lift
diamond butcher paper balsa wood
tied kites into his breath to feel out
currents, pull and sway…to test for
dominance of distance draft and lift.

Should such taunting pastime flag…
especially when Zeus streaks bolts
of lightning from his distant clouds…
their sporting turns to trouting with
live worms on hooks on lines on fish
poles by Naiades’ stream, in wordless
rivalry for the longest rainbow…best
tussle with a catch…finesse in reeling
out a gasping fish onto the grass.

When distant shouts bell whistle,
or the slant of shadow from a tree,
summon them to home, they end
camaraderie for one last sport…
these young contenders on a field.

They grasp hands tight slippery
with dirt spit sweat…link a ragged
crack-the-whip-snap for one last
quick elbow jab, foot trip, arm jerk,
stubbed toe, let go, fall dizzy to the
ground…as they play out their mythic
childhood of no tears, first middle last,
win lose…high tension…limit testing
dominance of lines.

 

Bonnie Marshall

Art by Winslow Homer, 1872

 

Life in a Fast Lane

sailboat-racing-marc-laytarLife in a Fast Lane

It’s taking chances
that pumps adrenaline
and quickens heartbeat…
I’m alive!

It’s a need to be seen
that inflates ego
and gathers  glances…
Look at me!

It’s prospect of failure
that builds tension
and causes  headaches…
You’ll burn out.

Yes… life in a fast lane
is gamble and hazard
and freedom and feeling
and fine.

Bonnie Marshall

Revised from August 2, 2012