color me pigeon
unremarkable gray, without the vibrant display
of tanager or jay, the allure of pigment and plume,
the strut and trill of birds who’ve been around
the world a time or two
I am a homebody who mates for life, sees no reason
to migrate across oceans and time zones, span
an equator for the promise of better seeds
better season
I am the color of dusk and fog, pedestrian crosswalks,
miserly cloud – I am a drudge and a nester who blurs
into crowd and curb and window ledge –
lackluster
in ways of conversation, revelation, fitting in with flocks
I am gray – the color of ash that remains after the flash
of feathers and fireworks
yellow
my father’s favorite, forsythia
grows by magnitudes each year
daffodils pierce earth and frost and expectation
each spring a fertile reckoning
yarrow’s gilded feathers fan bitter aromatic
each breeze a battleground
yellow is a strident shade
the mad raucous of spring
a frenetic, drunken plunge into the deep
end of the season
I prefer columbine, phlox, trillium
a pastel progression, an easing in
but he has no patience for preludes, pacing
himself, leisurely blooms
he is drawn now to the brashness of yellow
its warning sign of hazards ahead
curves and sharp turns, the rage against time
and forsythia’s blaze
As a 10-year-old summering with family in the Adirondack Mountains, Lucinda Trew decided she needed to move to NYC and become a songwriter like Carole King. While she didn’t make it to the big city, she did marry a musician, and loves to experiment with sound, meter and rhythm in poetry.