a way of
moving with/under
well chosen clothes
fulfillment
full feel met
. . . and arriving. Poetry is something some
people must write or speak.
Some people, including poets,
must make distinctions about poems
and poets, for society’s a place
of endless distinctions,
which make for a lot of noise
and lists, walls and squabbles.
Imagine someone standing on a beach,
making distinctions about waves,
saying which are good, which are bad,
which are great, which must be dismissed
and scorned.
Note that the waves keep coming.
The poems keep coming because
They must. The moon drives the waves.
What drives the poems? A trillion
Different moons, that’s what.
And one of them is language itself—
that great mystery in the brain,
in the air, in the squares, in the ears
and eyes, in the everywhere we live.
The poems will keeping arriving.
Some of them belong to you.
hans ostrom 2022
(I had observed this squirrel-behavior over the years--when they lie on their bellies to cool off--but the term "splooting" was new to me.)
Yes, squirrel, your body's
covered in thick gray-brown fur.
You don’t have a word for summer
but your body does. All day,
you run up and down trees,
driving upward with thick thighs,
clinging downward with sharp
fore-claws. One tree
holds your nest, where you
go to check on the kids. Otherwise,
you search madly for nuts,
hold them in your mouth
(oh, jaw-ache), bury
them for later, forget where
you buried them, search, smell
them out, dig them up, move them,
on and on, dawn til dusk.
Sometimes you stop for a snack,
and chew through a hard nut-shield
(oh, more jaw-ache) and eat,
all the while glancing
anxiously around for killers
including the beastly Tall Ones
whose fur could be any color,
who drive great hideous clouds
which have murdered and
flattened friends you mourn.
When the heat wears you down
and your jaws and legs ache,
you find cool grass, lie down,
spread your arms and legs,
and, ah, let the lovely chill
pass through your belly-fur into
your body. Squirrel, you have
earned this a hundred times over--
this rest, your time of splooting.
hans ostrom 2022