Friday, August 1, 2008

motor way: driving to Ontario

as far North
as my neck would turn
and see so muddy, crusted roads
winding through woods
that could be future pencil boxes
or a half used reams
of wheat hued paper.

lights dance
on the rim
and underscore the rime
collected at the
edges of things
made with a torch
and an assortment of hammers.

these tall buildings
ring the public square
as we play chess
on hard cement tables
sitting on chairs
with backs made of
grey, weathered slats.

somewhere on this road
lies a guitar that fell from a truck
driving through Ontario
toward the Ambassador Bridge.

a half used notebook
full of poems in
the slang of two warring languages
lies face up in a drainage ditch
outside a factory
specializing in cyclone fenced
ringed with barbed wire,
big pipes feeding brown fluids
to the river.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I hope you don't mind me saying so but you sound a lot like Kerouac, but even more concise, like Frost.
Very nice word pictures which put a person right there, inside your visions.

TED BURKE said...

Hey, thank you for the kind and generous words. I do appreciate your taking the time to read this poem.