Sweet Night
Song
by Judy
Katz-Levine
Never to leave
the plum tree and always to
breathe the
stark chill of autumn night.
Because I will
live until 110 ride an
intense wave of
glory. An ocean wave of
aqua and
strands of red seaweed. I became
sober. Became
stern as in the way
we see a film
of a war scene and don't
tell
anyone. There's this woman who
is saving my
life over and over again.
The flutes
dance in a room where
Neruda swears
and drinks Chilean red
wine. I am
not to be undone. Am
to wear stark white,
and stark
black and
shirts flowering with
coleus. Never
to leave this earth.
A piñata of
clouds will
burst, raining
down blessings of a
sweet night
song.
* * * * *
Judy Katz-Levine, judykatzlevine.weebly.com/, is an internationally published poet
whose two full-length collections include Ocarina
and When The Arms Of Our Dreams Embrace. Her
chapbook, When Performers Swim, The Dice
Are Cast, was published in 2009 by Ahadada. A new full-length
collection, The Everything Saint,
will be published by WordTech in August of 2018. Her poems have appeared
recently in Salamander, Blue Unicorn, Constellations, Peacock
Anthology, River Poets Journal, Event Horizon, Miriam's Well, Unlikely Stories
Mark V, and many other journals. Also a jazz flutist, she performs on
occasion and writes spiritual melodies for flute and voice.
No comments:
Post a Comment