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Saturday Poem: Enlisting
Saturday, July 05, 2008
So the dog house is empty now.

Rexie died last summer battling
a Honda and Isaac drank the last
batch of dog house hooch you made
four years ago.

The neighbors cut the front yard for us.
No one cuts the back -- the grass
tassels, turns brown, scatters seeds.

Where are you going? When will you be back?
Suddenly, one pair of your shoes on the floor
and the living room is a mess.

Maybe the moon is big enough for you.
Or the desert is big enough. Or the sky.
Or the ocean. Or the Antarctic.
Or the desert. Or the moon. Or a mountain
somewhere with a desert and a moon.

Some long finger beckons our children:
come and live in this foreign city, come and live
in this new and beautiful family. Here
is better food. Here, your own new window
to look out of. A view I will only glimpse
from over your shoulder.

I'm the rabbit in the woods.
I see too much. Even the trees
are dangerous with their snapping twigs
and owl's nests. Listen, son, listen.
Listen to everything. Stay still, son.
Stay down. Don't make a sound.

But you are afraid of nothing, yet. So far, nothing
has killed you. Every moon you've seen
has been blue and luck pulls in
like a Japanese train. Why wouldn't you expect
holy crusades and rhyming couplets?
Buckets of money and unrelenting true love
in deep warm grass, along a friendly quiet road?

-- Linda Lee McDonald

Linda Lee McDonald, a teacher at Shady Side Academy, lives in Mt. Lebanon. Her work has appeared in 5AM and has received the North Carolina State University poetry prize. Her son, 19, is serving in the U.S. Army in Germany as an intelligence analyst.
First published on July 5, 2008 at 12:00 am
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