1) Evening Birds
With the sunset comes
the first of the evening
birds, with their glassy
eyes and piercing blue
notes, bragging about all their
women in the dark
places of our quaint
little neighborhood, the sun
now nothing but a
residue of pink
and gold on the horizon,
and the stars just now
focusing all their
distant gazes upon us
from places that some
scientists say are
now just giant holes in space,
that lead somewhere else.
2) Timing the
Thunder
We were waiting for
a
storm to brew while the moon
played
accordion
and
wore a paper-
boy
hat (rakishly angled),
looking
down on the
empty
streets of our
nameless
little town that most
people
only seemed to
remember
because
of
something horrible that
happened
here a long
time
ago. But it’s
just
another Friday night
down
here and nothing
to
do but watch the
lightning
on the horizon
and
time the thunder.
3) A Couple Hundred Miles of Here
A night out on a Midwestern highway in an old
convertible, beneath a sky crowded over with
numerous constellations, and the dashboard all
aglow with the Drifter’s Under the Boardwalk
or You Send Me by Sam Cooke, from what I’d
bet has to be the last damn station, FM or AM,
within a couple hundred miles of here that still
plays this kind of stuff, is about as good a night
down here on Planet Earth, as one can hope for.
4) Portrait of Old Man Sitting on Park Bench
As dark spring clouds begin to collect and sag
with the inverse sadness of the season,
the sun is reduced to little more than a
pocket
flash light shining through a thick fog.
And someone’s playing
opera
somewhere
out
here
on
what
I’d swear
was an old-
timey gramophone,
with that tinny, echoey tone.
And a skinny old man is sitting on a park
bench,
sipping from a brown bag and nodding his
head
of wild white hair along with the music.
5) There’s
Reasons They Call It the Cruelest Month
Just something about a cold, gray day,
wet
and windy as hell, in mid-April,
of
all things;
and
maybe you’re just reposing, conspicuously,
in
a bookstore / coffee house / bar (or all three,
sequentially,
throughout the afternoon),
with
Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue (the whole
album
set
to repeat on an ancient but ever-reliable ipod and
earbuds
found in a forgotten cardboard box in the
back
of the closet), providing an interesting backdrop
and
running commentary on this rather moody,
atmospheric
and unseasonably wintery scene.
Happens
every year about this time but
we
always seem to forget there’s reasons they call it
the
cruelest month (if but the most bi-polar
/
passive
aggressive, at the very least).
But,
more often than not, we’re all eventually
reminded
by something that this will all be over with,
most
likely this time next week, and the hard days
of
summer on us soon enough.
***
Jason Ryberg is the author of eighteen books of poetry,
six screenplays, a few short stories, a box full of folders,
notebooks and scraps of paper that could one day be
(loosely) construed as a novel, and, a couple of angry
letters to various magazine and newspaper editors.
He is currently an artist-in-residence at both
The Prospero Institute of Disquieted P/o/e/t/i/c/s
and the Osage Arts Community, and is an editor
and designer at Spartan Books. His latest collection
of poems is The Great
American Pyramid Scheme
(co-authored with W.E. Leathem, Tim Tarkelly and
Mack Thorn, OAC Books, 2022). He lives part-time
in Kansas City, MO with a rooster named Little Red
and a billygoat named Giuseppe and part-time somewhere
in the Ozarks, near the Gasconade River, where there
are also
many strange and wonderful woodland critters.
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