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Now an annual autumnal literary festival visit to our island redoubt, the snow geese come honking down, in linear formation warning itinerant human beachcombers of their arrival on the beach runways of our sheltered island This TripTik recommended diversion, is a pleasure long anticipated by them, seen as an intellectual rest stop, with excellent sea snacks cuisined, flying down the Eastern Seaboard keeping Interstate 95 on their right, an avian version of GPS Our birds, follow a minor route, commencing in Nova Scotia, the farthest north of all the species, never making it to Mexico, ending their travelogue in Georgia, lest their true species be confused with other kinds of Floridian snowbirds Sit by my side they do, one by one in assigned seats, on the now scrawny grass blanket, their attention span famously long, unless a school of striped bass seen on radar in the vicinity I, on my Adirondack throne, a poetry reading to intone, with more-than-occasional audience input, considered their right most fair Critics one and all, animated animal devotees of the arts, unafraid to express their thoughts, oft in unison or in unharmonious John Cage cacophonies of disagreement Sadly, I only speak local seagull, thus their effusive exege(e)ses and criticisms, either damming or acclaim, indistinguishable, their only "tell" is if they stick around for just one more...day... That my poetry they did favor was a conceit I feigned to believe, loving their attention even if not deserved, for in their service, and nature's too, I am now trained to sit and wait, a minor stitch in a famous tapestry, for well I recall Milton's words: *"God doth not need Either man's work or his own gifts: who best Bear his mild yoke, they serve him best. His state is kingly; thousands at his bidding speed And post o'er land and ocean without rest: They also serve who only stand and wait."*
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Sep 21, 2014
Sep 21, 2014 at 10:05 AM UTC
Sitting, Waiting, Serving the Snow Geese
Now an annual autumnal literary festival visit to our island redoubt, the snow geese come honking down, in linear formation warning itinerant human beachcombers of their arrival on the beach runways of our sheltered island This TripTik recommended diversion, is a pleasure long anticipated by them, seen as an intellectual rest stop, with excellent sea snacks cuisined, flying down the Eastern Seaboard keeping Interstate 95 on their right, an avian version of GPS Our birds, follow a minor route, commencing in Nova Scotia, the farthest north of all the species, never making it to Mexico, ending their travelogue in Georgia, lest their true species be confused with other kinds of Floridian snowbirds Sit by my side they do, one by one in assigned seats, on the now scrawny grass blanket, their attention span famously long, unless a school of striped bass seen on radar in the vicinity I, on my Adirondack throne, a poetry reading to intone, with more-than-occasional audience input, considered their right most fair Critics one and all, animated animal devotees of the arts, unafraid to express their thoughts, oft in unison or in unharmonious John Cage cacophonies of disagreement Sadly, I only speak local seagull, thus their effusive exege(e)ses and criticisms, either damming or acclaim, indistinguishable, their only "tell" is if they stick around for just one more...day... That my poetry they did favor was a conceit I feigned to believe, loving their attention even if not deserved, for in their service, and nature's too, I am now trained to sit and wait, a minor stitch in a famous tapestry, for well I recall Milton's words: *"God doth not need Either man's work or his own gifts: who best Bear his mild yoke, they serve him best. His state is kingly; thousands at his bidding speed And post o'er land and ocean without rest: They also serve who only stand and wait."*
Sept. 21, 2014
nat-lipstadt
Written by
99/M/NYC/Lippstadt/Kraków
Sep 21, 2014
Sep 21, 2014 at 10:05 AM UTC
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