Perfect

Autumn

BY T. E. HULME

A touch of cold in the Autumn night—
I walked abroad,
And saw the ruddy moon lean over a hedge
Like a red-faced farmer.
I did not stop to speak, but nodded,
And round about were the wistful stars
With white faces like town children.

 

The Red Pump

 

 The Red Pump

  

 Lightning rumbles through this afternoon’s dream,

  the day’s end crawls forward into

 gauzy pink and grey.

 

  Awake?  Asleep?

  Mist envelopes a patchwork of white bands

  And yellow stripes

 

 A wet rooster prowls this gritty asphalt

 nearby red pumps primed and ready

  to leave you flush for a price

  and  so it seems more the nightmare

 

 

   For in  a dream there is peace  until dawn,

   yet all dreams  end.

   Tommorow at daylight,  when  the cock crows

   the war begins anew.

 

   author:   e mchugh

 

Hopeful

I was chasing this blue butterfly down
the road when a car came by and clipped me.   
It was nothing serious, but it angered me and
I turned around and cursed the driver who didn’t
even slow down to see if I was hurt. Then I
returned my attention to the butterfly which   
was nowhere to be seen. One of the Doubleday   
girls came running up the street with her toy
poodle toward me. I stopped her and asked,
“Have you seen a blue butterfly around here?”
“It’s down near that birch tree near Grandpa’s,”
she said. “Thanks,” I said, and walked briskly
toward the tree. It was fluttering from flower
to flower in Mr. Doubleday’s extensive garden,   
a celestial blueness to soothe the weary heart.   
I didn’t know what I was doing there. I certain-
ly didn’t want to capture it. It was like
something I had known in another life, even if
it was only in a dream, I wanted to confirm it.   
I was a blind beggar on the streets of Cordoba
when I first saw it, and now, again it was here.
 

 

The Search for Lost Lives

by James Tate