I gather It’s a chore your Not thinking of anything Else so what You most likely attend to As you contemplate Your sunken cheeks In your chintzy Bathroom mirror is what You should’ve sunk Your teeth in all These years But didn’t.
Moderator's comment: Grrr. . . .if there’s but one iota of a chance my alter ego is spreading false—aka “fake”—news about his better half of a cur, I can assure him this mutt’s teeth are real. https://i.chzbgr.com/original/8257568768/hA0F95665/
Alright—on the left— Wearing a striped Long-sleeved shirt And dark pants, looking Smart as a tack as he gazes North onto a long gray Street stretching south Under an endless canopy Of low gray clouds—
Three cars are parked With their noses pointing North, too—it looks Like it’s early spring, For the lone Leafless sapling On the sidewalk shows Signs of coming To life again.
NB:photo courtesy of Tom Mattson, Administrator for FB page "You Know You Grew Up In Raymond When. . ." for which I thank him.
Early autumn late afternoon In a light northerly breeze Under the centenarian Plane trees, we pass The time sipping Coffee and keeping An eye out For the next crumpled, Crablike leaf to fall And scuttle past us when Just across the other Side of the rusted derelict Tracks, we catch sight of The black-garbed village priest Slowly making his way, pushing His paraplegic son along.
The Ancient Greeks used to think The soul was a moth, a small Bird or butterfly that escaped From the body once A mortal had left his mortal Existence behind; as such it was A favorite motif of many An Attic white-ground painter— Take this piece for example, Where we see the little winged one In question has just made his exit And is now perched upon the head Of the upright dearly departed Prior to taking off, presumably To somewhere where no doubt it won’t be So easy for the artist to capture him again.