The Blue-Painted Distance
By Cathy Song
Torn are the pages from the calendar,
 the days fluttering past the train’s window,
 the speed of  which has yet to be perceived
 for at each seat more immediate
 are the books about to be opened,
 the wax-papered sandwiches eaten,
 the bottles of  strawberry soda consumed.
 The journey between birth and death
 are the stations of  joy and sorrow
 or simple idleness
 when what remains in relief
 can be as inconsequential as an unexpected
 delay that finds you wandering
 through an afternoon of an old museum.
 Indistinguishable are the adornments
 from useful implements,
 the ill-lit displays of  rocks and shards
 you circle as if  in a maze,
 remembering the oddity of  it,
 startling upon a haunting diorama.
 Crouched around a glowing fire pit,
 a family of   hunters and gatherers
 huddles beneath sheltering skin.
 All around are the articles of  abundance—
 meat slabs draped like heavy
 blankets on a rack,
 geometric rows of  threads
 dangling from a loom.
 The ephemeral made tangible,
 tongues of cellophane flames
 cleverly quiver to convey
 a sense of warmth.
 Pulled into the scene
 you follow the trail of smoke
 across the blue-painted
 distance of  mesas dotted with bison.
 Wigs of  black twigs—
 someone’s idea of  indigenous hair—
 hide the faces of  the elders.
 Strapped onto its mother’s back,
 the lone baby stares unblinkingly at the sky.
 No one has thought to shut
 its eyes against the sun, the glare,
 the rolling cloud waves of  hooves and dust,
 the flies that will surely come.
Source: Poetry (October 2020)


