Joel Long
Counting Spring
Joel Long
Counting
Spring
A woodpecker taps the telephone pole in the backyard.
Doves don’t startle from the wire. The gray sky
balances frippery of spring, bobbing tulip heads,
little pink cups of air drowning
waxen tongues,
blades of irises sheathing lobbed buds, little birds.
Every bird is singular, sparrow and finch. I do not
count them. I forget that flash
in the window, new, winged,
hearted, bright smudge of a heart beating fast as molecules.
The last cat my mother will love hid in her crate, ignored
her food. My mother coaxed
her into the room with water.
Everything thirsts. There is only so much time for thirst.
The weather forecast calls for sun tomorrow and through
the week, and I am waiting for it. What kind of day will
it be? How many birds
will hide in the reeds, snowy egrets,
night herons, rails with tangerine beaks? I feel weather
on my skin. I breathe it. When someone sees me walking,
I am the weather. My mother tells me how quiet the house is
in Colorado
now the cats are gone. She tells me the day is clear
and warm. I want summer, and every time I want summer,
the days disappear, the last
birds speed past my window.
The Great Basin fills with storm clouds. It rains all day,
blessed rain that smears every window in the house with green.
And I am in the middle of losing every weather and spring.
Joel Long’s book Winged Insects won the White Pine Press Poetry Prize. Lessons in Disappearance (2012) and Knowing Time by Light (2010) were published by Blaine Creek Press. His chapbooks, Chopin’s Preludes and Saffron Beneath Every Frost were published by Elik Press. His poems and essays have appeared in Gettysburg Review, Sports Literate, Prairie Schooner, Bellingham Review, Rhino, Bitter Oleander, Massachusetts Review, Terrain, and Water-Stone Review, among others. He lives in Salt Lake City.
Featured in:
Red Rock Review
Issue 52