| The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Sharlie West
 
 
 A BOARDWALK KIND OF MIND
 when all the whirlies and twirlies
 are closed and fog
 creeps along
 the streets and slides
 around the drunk on the bench.
 It is winter
 and the cold sun faces into gray.
 At that time
 before the bars are open,
 before the one restaurant lets its greasy smell
 enchant the stragglers,
 a door opens
 just for a minute
 and everything is bathed
 in a silver mist
 that shines each object into new
 and the drunk on the bench
 stirs and catches
 the silver.
 
 
 PRINTS
 
 A white frame house is outlined
 by my restaurant window.
 Carved doorknobs, shutters tense.
 Across the street strides a russet-haired girl,
 
 long black tunic, an insouciant hat.
 I imagine her years later, forehead creased,
 pulling the hands of her children.
 
 A man in a felt hat smiles into my window.
 My finger traces his edge on the glass.
 As I leave, the green leather chair
 holds my print.
 
 More of me leaks every day
 into dust on the mirror ledge,
 a tabby chasing down sewers,
 woodfire smoke.
 
 I look for a room to collect the prints,
 an empty room with round corners,
 amber lights,
 dark mahogany walls,
 a weighted urn.
 
 
 © Copyright 2006-7 by Cook Communication
 
 
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