PUBLIC GARDEN

Leaves sigh overhead.

Stretched out on the public lawn,

couples speak low or

not at all. The last

days of summer gather us

as in years past. With

our backs to the sun

we look out on dark waters.

We hear the gulls call

from eternity.

The world suffers our wild dreams

in its patient gaze.

PUBLIC GARDEN

2 thoughts on “PUBLIC GARDEN

  1. The poem pivots on the surprise of the unfoolding sentence ‘We hear the gulls call / from eternity’. The ‘dark waters’ come to be seen as both the bay ruffled by wind and a symbol of the natural turbulence of finite existence. The backs to teh sun of the poet and his companion help the reader understand the darkness of the water. But how can we understand gulls calling from eternity? THe ‘world suffers’ is a clue. THe gulls are in teh world. THe ‘suffering’ isnot only enduring pain but waiting, the ‘world’ both the finite realm of finite existence and the span of time fading into what exceeds and continues it in transformation.

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