![]() My Moses
Big Jack and his walking stick live on the ridge. Navajo orphan kids dance for him, bobcat urine's in the weeds, the shotgun barrel's up his sleeve, a Persian coin is on the wind. The Chinese Mountains smell the moon and arch their backs. I tell him, Jack, there's times I wish I was living in canvas France, the old west, a picture book, the Sea of Tranquility, or even in the den near the hot spring. He says, kid, to hell with phantom limbs; spring is a verb, a wish is a wash, a walking stick is a gottdam wing. From Volume 192, Number 4, July/August 2008 Copyright © The Poetry Foundation |