"Running Down" photo by Ward Jarman

[Marlo]

 

Freed from hellacious daydreams,

bathed in scattered white, bright beams

 

with thin translucent,

pale green, maple leaves flashing,

he reminisces

 

about past playful delights

with photos of kids and kites.

 

Good Kevin Jacobs

recalls joyful photo shoots,

models to recruit,

 

and studio shots composed

for hot fashion magazines.

 

His current passion

envisions past persuasions

that water succeeds

 

to alter through invasion

to move solids to liquids.

 

Inwardly absorbed

his mind’s eye spied his last shot,

a deed forgotten

 

until freedom’s gift lifts hope

renewing his vision’s scope.

"After the Rain" AI image by Bernard Jarman

[Kevin]

 

Supple sphere, clear, clean,

serenely pristine, simple

droplet of water 

 

suspended by fast optics

when strobe lit to spilt time quick

 

floats in memory

of youthful images stored

behind closet door

 

of abandoned apartment

due to a forced departure

 

to alter one’s plight

through prolonged guided insight

into obscured core,

 

for I am mostly water,

minute membraned liquid orbs.

 

Infinitely small

seas of proteins from first cells

mutated to be

 

basic elements of me

arranged, specified and tied

 

into agreements

to cooperate with goals

over time to heed

 

the command to understand

the choices made to succeed

 

and breed better seeds

to survive other creatures’

need to feed on us.

 

Yet seawater gags sailors

on desert-dried wooden ships

 

that slipped far beyond

their filled-to-the-brim barrels

into parched peril.

 

Liquidized I(s) die to see

raindrops from blue cloudless skies

 

that deride soft pleas

from bold men seeking more gold

to hold themselves high

 

above all other creatures

including fellow humans

 

whose basic features

are our species mandate

that equate men’s lives

 

as singular expressions

of one manifestation.

 

To ride vast oceans

and die dry, dehydrated

by greed’s desire

 

requires true ignorance

of why one should ride the tide.

 

Bill, are we the same?

Explain our difference,

with significance.

                                  [Hastings]

 

Apart from my good looks and wit

I read more books and am taller

by a most significant inch.

You, the smaller, look up to me

as it should be between mentor

and inexperienced brilliance.

Kevin]

 

What a pompous ass!

You better laugh heartily

to mask your weak speech

 

and barter words pleasantly

to achieve veiled harmony.

 

Lunacy behaves

erratically spastic

producing rude fits

 

equipped with strong flailing arms

and youth’s railing rage gone wrong.

 

You grin and laugh more,

but I’m a dangerous man

quite hard to withstand.

                                  [Hastings]

 

My friend, I will take my chances.

A soft risk enhances Life’s bisque

of friend and foe simmered in milk

spiced with uncertainty and guile.

**                        *                       **

[Kevin]

 

Do you remember Light Sphere,

that photo I shot last year,

 

one drop suspended

intended to freeze moments

from first emergence

 

to final reabsorbing,

cataclysmic convergence.

 

A blink of an eye

and we all must swiftly die:

juiceless, shriveled forms.

 

But water rejuvenates,

evaporates as vapor

 

to cling to cloud dust

to grow robust and freefall

as single droplets

 

crashing on Earth’s dry, parched skin

to bring forth green from dull brown.

 

Pooled in crevices

excesses first spill over

sharp edged rock worn smooth

 

beneath light gurgling sounds,

as fresh water wares down mounds

 

that bar its race home.

Confined rain binds together

to morph when constrained

 

into small brooks that converge

into feisty streams that merge

 

into wide rivers

that cut deep gorges to forge

grand canyon landscapes

 

for awe struck eyes that will see

water’s soft severity

 

that facilitates

the rush to the global source

of Life’s wet resource.

 

But Henry Twisting can’t sue

to renew his well fed life.

 

He is gone for good.

Should anyone want him back,

We lack such power.

"Rushing River" photo by Ward Jarman