Saturday, April 26, 2025

Greetings from the Mother Road

 


With Jackson, standin' on the corner,

winds are low, had a glass of Arizona

tea.  We are a fine sight to see.

 

Even an eagle stopped to take a look at me.

I mostly write, Jackson sings,

hocked some guitar strings.

 

But baby, if I could afford a flatbed ford,

I’d open up if you were climbing in,

maybe.  Is it true, you’ve been gettin’

your kicks with other chicks?

 

Write back soon, and don’t forget (me)!

 

Take it easy,

Winona, Route 66

 

 

© 2025 Jennifer Wagner

 

Poem-A-Day 26:  write a hermit crab poem (in this case, a poem that takes on the form of a postcard)

 

Photos © Jennifer Wagner.  The iconic corner of Winslow, AZ on Route 66 with statue of Jackson Browne who wrote the song “Take it Easy” with Glenn Frey for the Eagles.  My poem references many of the lyrics, as well as some from the classic “(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66” song.

 



Friday, April 25, 2025

Honeymoon, Cabo San Lucas, 1998

 

ghost crabs scurrying on the beach at night

 

our umbrella being stolen while we were snorkeling on Tortuga Beach

the tide, too, (almost) stealing our lunch

 

replacing the Cokes in the hotel fridge so we wouldn’t get charged

 

the glass bottom boat seasick tour, one yellow fish

 

our sunburns

 

our wild ride up the coast

in the convertible bug

 

the best Italian food (whodathunkit)

 

the wild burro nodding sleepily

 

the photo of our feet at the pool

my ring

and the silver and onyx bracelet I still wear

 

The Hotel California, or at least the sign for it

 

pink champagne on ice (actually, margaritas)

dancing in the courtyard (actually, evading the police)

 

checking out and

never leaving—

 

coming up on the 27th lovesick tour with you (whodathunk that, too)

 

us, ghost crabs, scurrying on the beach,

still evading the police (when we have to!)

 

 

© 2025 jennifer wagner

 

a list poem for poem-a-day 25: write a memory poem

 

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Now & Then

 

 

Now, the streets are worn and cobbled,

but among them I still hover, hobble—

survivor of the fate, the madness, of the war.

 

Then, it was otherworldly,

that Italian sketchbook summer,

flesh-flushed out in lush, romantic watercolor form.

 

Then, we walked

through wildflowers,

caught our dresses on the hands of orchids,

bridged the brushsong birdsong,

daisies threaded in our hair.

 

Now, that page has turned,

but I return to the art of tenderness alone—

stumbling, trying still

to catch our spirits’ crash

before the fall broke us to stone.

 

 

© 2025 Jennifer Wagner

 

Shay’s Word Garden Word List: Tenderness

dVerse Poetics: Fated, OLN

Day 24 NPM