(No, this isn't the O'Keeffe painting mentioned in today's poem; that has far more going for it than my little photograph does)
It was like a haiku moment.
I was walking along, just letting my mind wander, when I noticed the young oak which had been planted near the sidewalk.
A winter breeze waggled the leaves, and it was almost like they were beckoning me. I paused to watch them, then realized that they reminded me of a Georgia O'Keeffe painting I had seen at the Dayton Art Institute.
As soon as I got home, I sat at the kitchen table, as I often did then, and started writing ... so I could preserve my impressions ... and share them with Phyllis.
Somewhat later, thanks to the folks at The Christian Science Monitor, those impressions found a larger audience.
And here they are again:
SUPPLICATION
The oak
retains its leaves,
purple-palmed mittens
hanging out to dry,
waving in supplication,
inviting a closer look
that shuts out all
except those few
as painted
by Georgia O'Keeffe,
and then not purple,
exactly, but that
kind of purple
that was
her gift to us.
©1996
(originally published in The Christian Science Monitor)
Today's word: waggled
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