UENESS I COULD EAT FOREVER
   Jeffrey A. White
   Copyright 2013 by Jeffrey A. White
   Cover image by Jeffrey A. White/Pont des Arts, Paris, 2012
   Table of Contents
   SURFACES
   LIKE A DREAM
   THE CRICKET'S SONG
   WHEN
   A BLUENESS I COULD EAT FOREVER
   BEAUTY
   TOGETHER
   ONLY A DREAM
   BIG CITY
   OUR LOVE
   LOOK BACK
   WHAT DO I REMEMBER
   BEES
   LOVING HER
   COLD LIGHT
   WAVES
   MY MIND'S EYE
   FEELINGS
   OLD MAN'S DREAMS
   EARLY MORNING FEAST
   MY PATH
   A COLLECTOR OF SHOES
   READING POETRY
   BETWEEN TWO HEARTS
   WHEN SHE COULDN'T GET UP
   I DREAM MY POEMS
   HUMANITY
   A FEW MINUTES
   LOVE STORY
   ROBBED
   THIN, WISPY CLOUDS
   HOW IS YOUR SOUP?
   LATE WINTER
   STORIES
   MAYBE EVEN ENJOY A SUNSET?
   LAND OF TURTLES
   AN UNKNOWN ARTIST
   DIFFERENCE
   SOMETIMES
   SURFACES
   As I am stirring sugar into my latte,
   I look around the crowded outdoor caf?.
   I don't know anyone.
   To me, these strangers are surfaces,
   flat images,
   hollow projections and noise,
   but nothing more.
   I find the last empty table,
   a green metallic skin,
   spotless,
   rolled perfectly flat and thin,
   smooth and cold
   and glistening like polished glass
   in the early morning sun.
   A man and his two-year-old daughter are sitting
   at the table next to me.
   He lowers his latte to touch the lip of her juice drink.
   She raises her juice to meet his latte.
   As the father says "Salud," the father and daughter
   nod their heads in unison.
   With a glance to the father,
   I say, "When I was in my twenties,
   I rarely noticed children.
   Then, in my late forties, I guess I hit grandpa age.
   I started noticing children everywhere.
   Children warm my heart?You are truly blessed."
   The father smiles at me
   and says, "Thank you."
   And then, he looks back at his daughter
   with a loving smile.
   LIKE A DREAM
   It all seems like a dream, now.
   Gray, old men ambling about a bookstore
   in the old Jewish quarter of Paris.
   As everything is suddenly soaked a dark stain,
   we duck inside a door stoop.
   I gently pull you closer
   and look into your eyes,
   azure pools inviting me to sink
   into their sensuous depths.
   Time slows as everything revolves around us
   and planets, stars and constellations
   slowly turn like clockwork,
   as we dream our love,
   our universe - together.
   As darkness drains from the early morning sky,
   I pull you up to my chest and whisper,
   "Do you remember when we were caught in the rain in Paris?"
   You squeeze my hand.
   It all seems like a dream, now.
   One love, one dream, one universe,
   with only you and me,
   together,
   dreaming our love forever.
   THE CRICKET'S SONG
   I heard a rapid alternation of notes,
   a vibrating staccato of an ancient instrument,
   nearly as old as nature herself,
   a cricket singing
   in my garden last night,
   the first time this year.
   When turning my garden's soil,
   I often uncover crickets,
   curmudgeons that scramble to find solitude
   and cover from the light,
   but I rarely hear their
   ancient song 'till near
   summer's end.
   Although the wind is now lofting the branches
   and rustling the leaves,
   the evening sun
   still warms my face.
   And my garden still blooms full
   with pink-papered hollyhocks
   and blue, green spikes of lavender,
   and roses,
   bright pinks and yellows,
   all glowing from sunshine-swelled canes,
   and zinnias,
   rainbow-shingled orbs,
   and more.
   And yet, I am already dreading
   the coming of fall,
   all dressed in small rags
   of red, yellow, and orange.
   I know that my summer garden
   is nearing its end,
   as hailed by the cricket's song.
   WHEN
   When I hear birds serenading the gift of a new day,
   When I watch the trees sway like fields of wheat
   and feel a warm wind brush my face,
   When I see clouds slowly drift and turn
   like millstones,
   I know happiness.
   When I hear the sweetest notes grace your lips
   and reveal your generous smile,
   When I gently pull you closer and inhale your perfume,
   which harks back wonderful memories,
   When I gaze into your eyes and gently kiss your crimson lips,
   When you are resting your head on my chest
   and we feel intimately connected,
   as if your beating heart is my heart, your body is my body,
   and our souls are intermingled,
   I know love.
   A BLUENESS I COULD EAT FOREVER
   As our Milky Way galaxy
   slowly pinwheels
   across the darkness
   towards some
   unknown
   destination?
   I stop to breathe and look around
   at the plastered houses
   with their rainbow hues
   and swaying trees
   and the immense
   blue sky,
   a blueness
   I could eat forever.
   And, then
   (for no particular reason)
   I look down at the paved path,
   gray liquid stone long since set
   and worn rough.
   Inside a crack,
   I spot a pinprick of color:
   a tiny,
   yellow,
   flower
   with waxen petals,
   all blooming from green-cupped leaves,
   which are slowly
   encroaching upon
   the stony grayness.
   BEAUTY
   Just outside my bay window,
   my neighbor sheared back a camellia
   with pink flowers,
   pretend stars.
   For the first time from my living room couch,
   I could watch wispy white clouds
   slowly drift and turn
   like leaves floating on a meandering stream.
   How like a white cloud you are:
   beautiful.
   And yet, few notice you
   unless you become wild
   and dark.
   Is beauty so common
   that people don't see it
   unless it is extraordinary,
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   except for me,
   when I wake in the morning,
   brush the hair from your eyes,
   hold your hands
   and drink coffee with you?
   TOGETHER
   As I round the corner, I see a crouching derelict
   with a sagging spine, blistered gray skin,
   bandaged eyes
   and fallen gutters.
   Strewn across the front yard are weedy thickets,
   mounds of toothed vines,
   and sun-bleached bones of forgotten furniture.
   It has been a long time since this old house was alive
   with the music of children and adults
   talking, laughing, singing and loving,
   all making lives together.
   ONLY A DREAM
   As I brush the hair from her eyes
   and gently kiss her cheek,
   I whisper,
   "And what of you, my love?"
   Are you dreaming of white picket fences, cottage gardens,
   and white dresses?
   Are you dreaming of lying on cool grass on a warm summer night
   while the heavens slowly turn like a millstone?
   Are you dreaming of white sailboats skimming across the Nile
   like flocks of white doves,
   my beautiful queen?
   Sleep well, my love.
   And be sure to dream a place for me,
   somewhere between the darkness and the white fires,
   a place where I can cherish you in my arms,
   as we dream our love, our universe,
   into being.
   Sleep well, my love,
   for without you,
   I am only a dream.
   BIG CITY
   Glass-skinned swords,
   soaring out of blackness,
   propped against the sky,
   edges glistening in the sun,
   all casting razor edge shadows
   and deep canyons,
   from which masked strangers
   flow, join and separate,
   write their stories
   and play their roles.
   OUR LOVE
   Stretching beyond the horizon,
   the sea, a lustrous blue fabric,
   draws tight and taut
   over the face of the world,
   tinged orange at its far edges
   by a low-hanging sun,
   a glowing tangerine
   cut wide open.
   Squeezing against the sand,
   foamy waves endlessly surge, retreat
   and weave irregular edgings
   of land and sea.
   Small, stilted birds waltz the surf,
   grasses gently sway in a light air
   and one-legged seagulls sleep like flags
   stuck in the sand.
   We splash and play in the surf,
   laugh and giggle.
   Drops of saltwater drip down her face
   and roll over the curves of her breasts.
   Our hands touch,
   and we slide into each other's arms,
   into the grasses now beating to a sea breeze,
   now beating to our hearts,
   into the grasses, where screeching seagulls
   are now lunging into clear air.
   LOOK BACK
   Several years ago,
   I visited a friend who had built a country cottage,
   surrounded by a vast rolling garden of sunlit meadows,
   rainbow blooms, shaded glens,
   streams and ponds.
   It was impossible to see
   the entire garden all at once.
   The only way to imagine the wholeness of the garden
   was to walk through it,
   follow the winding path
   and view the garden from different perspectives.
   Invariably, secrets revealed themselves
   around each bend.
   And sometimes, I chose to step off the winding path
   and follow the contours of the land
   and my heart.
   In my youth, I imaged my entire life
   planned out before