Diane
christened it the Bean House,
Since
everything in it came straight from an
L.L. Bean
Home catalog. It looks out upon two
Meadows
separated by a stand of trees, and at night,
When the
heat begins to dissipate and the stars
Become
visible in the uncontaminated sky,
I like to
sit here on the deck, listening to the music
Wafting
from the inside through the sliding patio doors,
Listening
to the music in my head. It's what I do:
The days go
by, the days remain the same, dwindling
Down to a
precious few as I try to write my name
In the book
of passing days, the book of water. Some
Days I go
fishing, usually unsuccessfully, casting
Gently
across a small stream that flows along beneath
Some
overhanging trees or through a field of cows.
Call it
late bucolic: this morning I awoke to rain
And a late
spring chill, with water dripping from the
Eaves, the
apple trees, the pergola down the hill.
No fishing
today, as I await the summation
Of my interrupted
eclogue, waiting on the rain
And rhythms
of the world for the music to resume,
As indeed
it does: all things end eventually,
No matter
how permanent they seem, no matter how
Desperately
you want them to remain. And now the sun
Comes out
once more, and life becomes sweet again,
Sweet and
familiar, on the verge of summer.
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