Ray Ewing

The Road Ahead

I’m out for a walk along the bluffs overlooking Vineyard Sound / To shake off the grip of premonition, of ominous threat.

I’m out for a walk along the bluffs overlooking Vineyard Sound
To shake off the grip of premonition, of ominous threat.

Up ahead on East Chop Drive, I see a dark object caught
On the bare branches of a beach plum. A rat? A dead fish crow?

No. A brown glove snagged on the bush at a height where,
Blown thither by wind or secured by willing hand, its owner

Looking for a lost glove in cold weather might find it.
Farther on, something small lurches in the road, flails, stops.

A struggling squirrel? A wounded bird? No. Oak leaves, skittering.

On the roofline of a house along the shore, a Welsh Corgi weathervane
Whirls in the wind, its arrow pointing north-northeast, and I hear

A coming storm’s rumble. No, the steadfast Patriot charter, on its last run
of the day, chugs through chop, shuttling workers back to the mainland.

Entering the woods and almost home, I hear a voluminous rustle,
A helicopter whirr, so global a sound I can’t locate the perilous source.

Not so. I look up. In the absence of leaves, the branches of three
Or four towering oaks have flowered into a flock of wild turkeys.

Fifty or more settle and flutter, gobble and cluck. All through the night,
I think of them shifting from roost to roost, until they get it right.

 

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 05/04/2024 - 11:22

Permalink

Fred Berthoff Mass.

Love this poem. It is important to shake off those "Feelings of Impending Doom." (So you know the acronym, it's F.O.I.D.!)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 05/05/2024 - 11:44

Permalink

Robyn Goodwin Vineyard Haven

Oh my, your imagery! Like Cindy, I want you to narrate all my walks! Perfection.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 05/08/2024 - 16:24

Permalink

Elizabeth Quinson Suffern

Thank you for this poem. My favorite part: "four towering oaks have flowered into a flock of wild turkeys."

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.