I told you it was about to happen, and it did: I wrote four pages of linked sonnets yesterday morning, and there are more to come today. The long poem has me in its clutches. Around the edges of writing, I watered and weeded and tidied the downstairs rooms and folded laundry and made macaroni-and-cheese for a crowd and hosted a party. But even when I seemed to be distracted, the sonnets were shifting and sighing in their basket.
Chuck had a fantastic time at the party, which was both our regular writing group meeting and a silly first-birthday celebration for the Big Kitten. He exhibited exemplary good-boy charm, welcoming all guests at the door, playing with every toy he received, and not walking in anyone's dinner plate. What a cozy, friendly dingbat: he would love to host a party every day.
On the downside, the brakes on Tom's truck gave out. Blah.
Now here we are at Friday, with a long holiday weekend ahead. There's no canoeing in our forecast because the truck isn't drivable, but maybe we'll take my car down to Laudholm Farm and walk along the salt marsh. The days have returned to coolness, and rain is likely on Sunday and Monday. Lilacs are in their fragrant glory. Lilies-of-the valley nod along the edge of Baxter Woods. The cemetery flutters with bluebirds and mockingbirds. Tall dandelion puffs adorn the grass.
I am writing a long poem, and it feels like the orbital center of this universe. Irises and dripping hoses and line-drying shirts and brooms and dishpans and dead pickups and cats and mops and reel mowers and dinner plates . . . they all swirl around the poem--maybe a clutter of space junk, maybe dancers performing an elegant gavotte. To quote Spinal Tap, "there's a fine line between clever and stupid." But when a poem has me in its clutches, I don't have time to care.