103
After Watching Cyclists Race Along the Lake Front, I Return
Home to Lie Down, and Nap with Chu Hsi’s “The Boats Are Afloat”
Last night two more men rise
To the surface of our Lake.
On Sunday afternoons, white sails
Dot the Lake’s far horizon.
In an inland lake, I swim just above
Weeds turning my head to sky, weeds, then sky.
104
Reading “Spring Sun” by Chu Hsi on a Warm July Afternoon Near the Lake
After noshing on tuna with peas
We step out into our garden forest to check on
Our 30-foot-long pumpkin plant.
On these humid days
We’re grateful for breezes that may come our way.
Yesterday our Village almost floated
Away with more rain than ever
Before so we are all steaming.
105
On a Warm Summer Night I Stay Out in the Forest as Long
As I Can and Read Chu Hsi’s “The Farm by the Lake”
The only part of nature higher
Than us are the clouds
That float by each season.
We’ve seen almost
Every cloud in the book.
In our forest, we lean
Back in our lounge chairs
Cooling our lips with tea.
When we do have a
Full moon all our
Neighbors lean over our fence
And we forget, briefly, what woofs
Day and night behind our green crops.
We’ve said to each other how
Much we’d like to stay until
There’s nothing left of us.
There’s no place we’d really like
To visit more than this place.
106
After Reading the Morning’s News Near the Lake,
I Turn to Chu Hsi’s “Thoughts While Reading”
The 22-inch screen gleams back
At whom we are, reclined.
It’s a mirror of splendor
With dancers, murderers, chefs and “X-Files[1]”
All acting as special guests.
We’ve even learned how to save their future
In case we’re not here, now.
Summer storms often change our little stage to black.
________________________________
[1] A once popular TV series that featured two F.B.I. agents who searched for paranormal activity and the possibility of an alien-human conspiracy, now in reruns.
112
Awake Before Anyone Walks Along the Lakefront
I Rise and Read “Morning” by Chu Shu Chen
Most of the time I’m up before
Even the birds know what’s up.
I barely recognize who’s who
With the ribs so prominent
Below the sinking face.
Water helps brings the body back
To where it was once
Before. I shave the head, face
Then steam the old skin
I’m the first in our little kitchen
So I prepare food for loved ones.
----------------------------------
I’m the first in our little kitchen
So I prepare food for loved ones.
Bionote
Recent poems by DeWitt Clinton have appeared in Lowestoft Chronicle, The New Reader Review, The Bezine, The Poet by Day, Verse-Virtual, Poetry Hall, Muddy River Poetry Review, Across the Margin, Art + Literature Lab, One Magazine, Fudoki Magazine (England), and New Verse News. He has two poetry collections from New Rivers Press, a recent collection of poems, At the End of the War, (Kelsay Books, 2018), and another is in production from Is A Rose Press, a collection of poetic adaptations of Kenneth Rexroth’s 100 Poems from the Chinese.
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