
Falling Dreams
are the worst, often perched
on a ledge at the edge
of a mountainside,
the danger palpable,
a place where one false
move could prove to be fatal.
Why does the subconscious love
to tease us, we who shunned the risky
career of policeman, fireman, soldier
in favor of the relative safety
of music and poetry?
Some may call it destiny
though the news keeps us all on edge,
those of us airdropped with no parachute.
Brushstrokes
A decade after his death the ghost
of Bob Ross still reappears from time
to time on PBS, usually at odd hours
like after midnight weekdays or Sunday
morning when folks are still in bed or gone
to church. With his faintly hippie hairstyle
and gentle demeanor, he instructs us
in the subtleties of adding depth
to a grove of trees, or a slight shimmer
to the surface of a lake in the foreground,
another landscape in time's lost-and-found
with a "happy little cloud" adrift overhead
as if pathetic fallacy were somehow baked
into creation and today was the first day.
Mozart's Starling
(after Ralph Burns)
I wonder if there's an avian Mozart
who casts her voice more eloquently
than the rest, or why we assume that
genius is always masculine, and what
gender has got to do with creativity,
this uniquely human ability to create
meaning out of nothingness, manifest
a design or pattern even if only abstract
sound waves titillating our fallible brains.
If we're on the same wavelength, maybe
gender was never a factor, though males
have been more ostentatious by nature,
through the ages our dominant feature.
Meanwhile, lean a few branches closer
and pretend we are all nightingales.