Featured Writer: Amanda Reynolds

Nature Poem

 

The stout banana spider

loves the four-inch boards of the deck

my steps grind deeper into the earth.

 

At the trail head the sign should read:

Welcome to a few acres of useless

muse hunting.  I stop for a moment

 

to think of  Mr. Bivens (live-oak chopper)

with one arm, his ghost, nothing to do but sit

with vines and moss, what I’ve mistaken

 

for snakes and mold.  Here he dozes

until he hears my steps, then he’s off again, diaphanous

as ether, cobwebs licking his arm like tongues.

 

Perhaps this park is better off without me,

no urban temptations, no rubber soles,

no pen poised, no vision lacking.

 

 

 

Pasture on Sunday

 

There is Zen-like peace

in the chewing of cud,

 

the cut-and-shuffle of teeth and endive.

Baubles of spit settle near mushrooms;

 

daisies garnish a vegetable dish.

My dog stops chasing crickets,

 

suddenly enlightened by

two oracles of indolent bovine eyes.

 

What passes between them

is creature fervor, mammalian ardor,

 

tail swish and rumbling halt.

The rest of the Angus herd

 

stamps platitudes into terra firma.

On Monday the sheep come.

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                   

 

 

Amanda Reynolds


Email: Amanda Reynolds

Return to Table of Contents