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| >> Static Item >> Poetry >> Personal >> ID #1708137 |
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Concrete Box I work in a corporate, concrete box; no windows, only a computer terminal to link me to the outside world. Only second-hand accounts of weather, traffic, whether it is day or night. I sometimes go to work in darkness, return in darkness. I don't know if the sun remembered to rise at all. Like the light in a refrigerator. Does it really turn off when I close the door? At a keyboard, my fingers type numbers, millions of numbers. My mind wanders woodland paths. I watch birds flitting from branch to branch, chipmunks scurrying, stopping, looking around, then scurrying again. My mind plays tricks on me. I imagine that just 26 floors down I could exit on Beale or Bourbon Street. Hear sounds of the South, guitars, saxophones and raspy voices that rule the rhythm of my body and soul. Take me on a blues ride. Let me wander with the lyrics down Highway 61, "The Blues Highway". Let me smell the sweat and the booze, the jostling at the bar, the waitress who will smile for a tip. Let me smell magnolia, bougainvillea, where Spanish moss hangs below the trees, see the darkest eyes and brightest smile, hear that special whisper, "Come with me." We'll walk for miles, be holding hands, and never want for any more than our window to a dream.
© Copyright 2010 Dennis Cardiff (UN: dcardiff at Writing.Com).
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