Poem: Eyes of March 1 Reply It was your instincts that made me turn To see what I might not have seen at all: A slight shift in filtered patterns of light And shadow visible out the window Down the hill at the bottom of the yard. Colors, shading were so subtle – was it Just a trick of the breeze or light, mocking Perceptions the eye takes for truth? But there! She moved again, and I could see her eyes Turn in my direction, soft and deep brown, As if to answer my admiring gaze, And then, with graceful indifference, settled Deeper in artful repose, ears perked up As the only evident sentinels Alert to signals of danger, yet deaf To sounds from the freeway mere yards away. I marveled at this doe, alone against The city’s roar, yet seeming so at peace With herself and the world around her. Still, I thought of companions I saw her with Other times, threading the path to the lake With awkward fawns in tow — where were they now? I wished them in groves near the cool water Resting in groups like those in an eighteenth Century landscape, but I could not chase Away visions of bodies by roadsides, Limp and lifeless. Turning back to present Time, I saw her again, but now a gentle, Four-legged Buddha, beneath a chestnut. A bright aura of enlightenment danced In the mottled shade of nodding branches. Bill Kester March 31, 2004 Share this: Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email Like Loading...
lisalo61 June 25, 2020 at 2:59 pm I can just see and hear this poem! Picturing her in your backyard. Reply ↓
I can just see and hear this poem! Picturing her in your backyard.