a summer bug in your ear

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poetrycircle

 

A Summer Bug in the Ear

 

 

A summer breeze, a little bug to plant

Inside your ear before the season turns.

I’ve noticed how your verses walk and chant

In five-beat strides, a rhythm that returns

Like steady habits or an afternoon

Spent trading gossip in a shaded yard.

It wanders into four beats, late or soon,

But mostly keeps a conversational guard.

 

And Mary Oliver was right, of course:

The pentameter is a porch, a easy chair,

A voice that speaks without an urgent force,

Meandering through the warm and heavy air.

 

But if you want to strike a spark,

To cut the fabric to the bone,

To leave a deeper, sharper mark—

Then compress the tone.

 

Shorten the stride.

Tighten the line.

Let nothing hide.

Make it design.

Three beats will beat

A harder drum,

To turn the heat

Till meanings come.

 

It works quite well, this casual, easy pace,

And what you’ve written here is finely made.

But looking forward to a gathered place—

A book where all these changing pieces fade—

You’ll want a menu that can shift and shake.

The grandest feast will eventually bore,

If every party brings the chocolate cake,

And nothing else is knocking at the door.

 

 

 

 

 

at the door.

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