Partial Draft, Yellow Moon 1

I just need to write this down fast as a beginning — much work ahead, not much here but a rough idea, a feeling that I can’t capture yet

 

Yellow Moon

 

November born, we were still 17

            but college IDs were good enough

            for Urbana bars in those days

            and nights, like when we straddled

            the double yellow line that marked

            the border with Champaign, serenading

            that ripe old prairie moon

            with Neil Young and Bob Dylan,

            call and response like a prayer

            ricocheting from town to town

            and back, finding our rhythm,

            blending slow and sweet, then

            fast and wild my hands

            your hips a drunken reverie:

 

(Blue, blue windows behind the stars,

                        Sundown, yellow moon,

Yellow moon on the rise,

                        I replay the past,

Big birds flying across the sky,

                        I know every scene by heart,

Throwing shadows on our lives,

                        They all went by so fast.)

 

We shared pitchers of warm beer

            my flannel shirts

            drags on your cigarettes

            a twin bed beneath a window

            and Jack Kerouac:

 

       (The air was soft, the stars so fine,

The promise of every cobbled alley so great,

       That I thought I was in a dream.)

 

Two far out hipsters in frayed jeans

            holding hands across the monumental Quad

            skipping to the boom boom beat

            of our young and joyous hearts

            listening for the far off rumble

            of the raw American Midwest

            holy night barreling west

            across the big river

            to the Great Plains

            and the mountains and deserts

            and sea beyond, end of the world

 

Which is where I went.

            What could I share with you now,

            Ghost lover from beyond the horizon?

            My oldest child is just like we were then.

            My daughter’s a reader, like you.

            My youngest is named for Sal Paradise.

            I lived in Mexico and learned to read

            Neruda and Lorca in Spanish.

 

And what could you tell me?

            Is the Tasty Freeze still by the lake

            in the town you left behind?

            Does the harvest moon still shine

            sunflower yellow on the upturned

            faces of young lovers?

            Would you believe it if I

            read you this poem

And would you kiss me one more time?

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