“The Suburban Woods,” New Era, Aug. 1987, 24
The Suburban Woods
As I stroll within my
Suburban wood,
I sense the night’s rebirth.
The light turns a warm orange—
incandescent
from living room windows;
And the steel sky is lit by the
Infinite expanse of twinkling
city lights.
The cool twilight air feels gray
Against my face,
And pink autumn breeze blankets me
In peace.
I hear the soft, slurred rush of a distant stream
of traffic;
It hums a background for the crickets’
Lively lead.
Under my feet I feel the crackling snap of
crumbly concrete
As I walk beneath the shadows of a towering grove
of telephone poles.
The daylight fades, and
The woods echo with the night’s noisy hush—
And the faraway cries of hungry
children
coming home for supper.