Waiting for a bean to soften,
remembering when it all started
and the bean man marveled in his new popularity,
once the loneliest man at the marketplace,
suddenly the feeling of the hard dry drops
running through our urban fingers
felt like the woodcutter and his wife
with their provisions, their hearth;
the sight of hard dry beans assured
a speculative fiction survival
and a fantasy continuity
all at once. But what about now?
We're no longer the woodcutter and his wife,
collectively, though personally,
well, I personally am an unspayed housecat
but that aside, can't keep the pantry stocked
these days, anymore, though those days
have yet to truly pass into these, these and those
are endless and yet still the furniture moves,
my driver's license expires, my health insurance lapses,
we got windchimes but the wind blows in new directions,
the beans soaked and yet, and
will I ever stay out all night again,
and the woodcutter and his wife, weeping for their friends long gone.
"we got windchimes but the wind blows in new directions": damn. I love this.
ReplyDeletequestions that have lived in my head too
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