A Poem For Monday

Summ_evening

"The Poet at Seven" by Donald Justice:

And on the porch, across the upturned chair,
The boy would spread a dingy counterpane
Against the length and majesty of the rain,
And on all fours crawl under it like a bear
To lick his wounds in secret, in his lair;
And afterwards, in the windy yard again,
One hand cocked back, release his paper plane
Frail as a May fly to the faithless air.
And summer evenings he would whirl around
Faster and faster till the drunken ground
Rose up to meet him; sometimes he would squat
Among the low weeds of the vacant lot,
Waiting for dusk and someone dear to come
And whip hm down the street, but gently, home.

(Reprinted from Collected Poems by Donald Justice © 2004, with permission from Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Photo by Flickr user Michael Ragazzon)