Sunday, August 16, 2020

Poetry Sunday

As we get older, that tough, rugged engine that powered us through all the years of growth and work and play starts to sputter, and we wish for ... well ... maybe not French chocolates, but perhaps for that nimble and athletic body we once proudly showed on beaches and fields of contest. Ellen Bass says it well in this week's Poetry Sunday ...

French Chocolates
by Ellen Bass

If you have your health, you have everything
is something that's said to cheer you up
when you come home early and find your lover
arched over a stranger in a scarlet thong.

Or it could be you lose your job at Happy Nails
because you can't stop smudging the stars
on those ten teeny American flags.

I don't begrudge you your extravagant vitality.
May it blossom like a cherry tree. May the petals
of your cardiovascular excellence
and the accordion polka of your lungs
sweeten the mornings of your loneliness.

But for the ill, for you with nerves that fire
like a rusted-out burner on an old barbecue,
with bones brittle as spun sugar,
with a migraine hammering like a blacksmith

in the flaming forge of your skull,
may you be spared from friends who say,
God doesn't give you more than you can handle
and ask what gifts being sick has brought you.

May they just keep their mouths shut
and give you French chocolates and daffodils
and maybe a small, original Matisse,
say, Open Window, Collioure, so you can look out
at the boats floating on the dappled pink water.

Have a good day and enjoy the rest of your weekend. More thoughts coming.

Bilbo

2 comments:

Mike said...

"nimble and athletic body"
I still have mine. It's just hidden under my other body.

allenwoodhaven said...

I like it; thanks!