Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Natia

Photo © 2024 Jennifer Wagner


 

It was obvious

why she’d chosen the Marietta Diner,

in retrospect.

 

Spacecraft-esque and in Georgia.

 

She spilled a Coke

meant for someone else’s table

when she placed

a Cobb salad in front of me,

 

shaken by a few Russians discussing

the cosmonauts in a cloud of smoke nearby.

 

That’s when we’d recognized her

from a grainy photograph on the History Channel.

And of course, she’d had a different name.

 

Soon after, she’d been replaced

and we were told she’d taken ill.

 

But as we walked toward our Chevy,

there she was

crouching down behind it,

bumming a ride.

 

If someone is brave enough

to wear a red leather jumpsuit

and they ask for your help,

you know they need it.

 

So, we dropped her “anywhere,”

as requested.

She blew us a kiss,

and one toward the east,

 

then strode high, helmet in hand,

toward Narikala

and, we hoped, 

home.

 

 

© 2024 Jennifer Wagner

 

For Shay’s Word Garden Word List

 

Since I recently returned from a trip to Georgia (state not country) and watched (tripped-out over) Season 1 of Constellation, this is what the muse gave.

 

National Poetry Month: Day 2

 

Monday, April 1, 2024

Blue

 

Every season sings a song.

 

The bells and sorrows

of winter

clang on and on.

 

But if Frost was right,

they, too, only last so long.

 

Stepping on

the turf of spring,

 

new birds fill their lungs,

have their say,

and hope renews that

 

nothing blue can stay.

 

 

© 2024 Jennifer Wagner

 

 

For Writer’s Digest April PAD Challenge Day 1:  Write an Optimistic Poem

 

Happy National Poetry Month!

 

Frost’s poem

 

Wednesday, March 6, 2024

Summerland

 

I saw it sitting on an old pickup tire,

a butterfly

with sugar on its wings,

 

as we were wading

through weeds

up to our waists,

 

brushing our hands

on dandelions

turning our palms yellow,

 

breathing in sunshine,

climbing an abandoned tractor

in the field

 

to play—

maybe all afternoon,

maybe all summer.

 

It was gone

when we headed back

to watch Grandma feed the pigs,

 

and the dogs

lounging in the dirt

by the porch,

 

and to dunk our bread

into broth,

and bite into dark juicy plums.

 

And later,

I thought I saw it

from the window,

 

on the barn door

near where I had pulled off my boots

to climb a tree

 

and saw it watching me,

a butterfly

with sugar on my wings.

 

 

 

© 2024 Jennifer Wagner

 

 

dVerse Poetics:  Young and Green