Summer of '25

Poetry was the subject of April’s blog.

Spoiler alert - same subject this time.

The month of August inspired this pair of my poems. The experiences and emotions led to one emerging bright, and one dark.

Kind of like this year’s August.

21st of August

The ideal hour

of the ideal day

of the perfect season.

When iced-up time returns

this August day will too,

bring back

torrential flooding sun,

dammed only by leaves,

bitten all to holes, by

blitzkrieg bugs of summer.

Last wave of an assault

launched in April,

marched onward

through June’s sugar snaps,

joined by beetles that ate July

until August arrived, with its

explosions of lawnmowers,

hedge-rapers, grass-slashers.

Sound thrashers all,

though none so intense

as a flower, for instance. 

Observe a Rose of Sharon

as it traps the pair of manic bees

deep in its roseheart,

besotted, beside themselves,

upside down from such sweet nectar. 

Epitome of simplicity?

There is nothing so complex

as the full moon of an August

on the planet of high summer.

EIGHTH MONTH

 

Hunkering here, in the Jersey Pines,

braving insect kamikaze

beside a marshmallow ready fire

sparks another fire’s light,

beside a tent at summer camp.

It was a way station

from a world that had me cutting, at not-quite-ten.

It was the Fifties. They were paper dolls,

smiling folks, to sort to file,

families to set in tidy piles,

until the sweet, clean breeze

of other possibilities

blew through that August summer camp tent.

 

Segue,

to suburban Saint Louis.

I am twelve now, savoring watermelon-sliced recall,

snugged in a paint-globbed Adirondack chair

between August dusk and August dark,

aiming before spitting teardrop seeds,

hoping against hope to hit a firefly.

 

Dissolve,

to Lake George, upstate New York, the August Maryland died.

The morose Monroe news came crackling through

pine-pricked Adirondack air.

It reached the splintering dock where I heard all about it

 on my turquoise plastic transistor radio,

treasured thirteenth birthday gift from

the crazy uncle

who took tokens in the subways of New York,

with nothing but his diabetes for company.

The uncle who told outrageous lies

About transporting surgical teams through the Holland Tunnel

as they plied their trade in the back seat

of his large, late-model Buick sedan.

The uncle my mother hated

 to have come for even the briefest visit.

 

Another August.

I am 30 when my mother,

clutching her leaves-you-breathless Smirnoff in one hand,

and her toasted Lucky Strike in the other,

dies. To add “by fire”

would bring my hunkering to a screeching halt.

Better by far to pierce another marshmallow,

hoping against hope it will not blacken. Bubble. Burn.