Distant Trinity

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  • Allegory

    Distant Trinity



    A black and white terrier bolts
    out an unattended back door
    into the thick smell of pines.

    A white and black Michigan
    bishop breaths and dotes on
    his purest parishioners.

    Near the Neusse River my mother
    mopes about punctures in her palms
    from a white primrose with black thorns.

    The jack terrier
    pauses
    in dappled forest light,
    bares
    his smile knowingly.

    The Bishop cries: I excommunicate
    rainbow girls for sitting in pretend pots
    of gold, and take their host away
    to teach them Christian etiquette.

    My mother confesses to rich top soil
    flowery lies about love, chokes
    on her pollinated lust for my peace
    that won't be trained to stay.

    The terrier has caught a rat.
    Bowing his black head, he folds
    paws over a tremble,
    and partakes of the stillness.

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    The true philosopher and the true poet are one, and a beauty, which is truth, and a truth, which is beauty, is the aim of both.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson, American Poet (1803-1882)

    odes’s Poems (3)

    Title Comments
    Title Comments
    No Shoulder 2
    Distant Trinity 1
    Word Pall 2