Tuesday, September 25, 2012

the buffalo


some rainy, foggy, chilly midweek
when secretaries call in sick
and postmen wear goulashes
go to the zoo and take in what’s left

splash along the water-covered concrete
past occasional trees bent, looking away
from the wind’s lick

see the muddy, mucky, peanut-shelled patch
where there stands the buffalo
knee-deep, with dirty, unkempt, matted hair
his eyelids closing out the drizzle
shoulders that held up america

clothed the indians in a montana mountain snow
fed starving wagoneers not quite to the promised land
mark of the plains
symbol of an era

it is fitting that he be visited
for his eyelids are closing now, america

2 comments:

Annie said...

Hi Jack,
This reminds me of visiting a zoo, with a caribou, matted and neglected, out of his element. There's such a sadness, reflecting on the majesty that once was/could be. As a poem, you have a knack for taking the reader from one place to another, traveling with you through wind and climate and sights and ideas, with a rhythmic wandering and wondering, capturing a mood.

TomC said...

My Chippewa ancestors would love you for this mighty fine poem Jack. But then, I would have to set them straight