Enga mellom fjella: where from across the meadow, poems sing from mountains and molehills. |
First blood for the unnamed Night shrouds the stab of the knife and snow deadens your cry in the park below Higgin's bridge. The Clark fork river flows by, oblivious to pain. What's gained in the flash of cold steel, if not the anointment by blood of this new year's first day, We will read it tomorrow in this small town's newspaper, the story relegated to section B. Your name won't be named and no details will be forthcoming. They'll never report whether hot words were exchanged like arrows and the silence of stained ice will not say. Under the bridge, a new year's begun even the snow not yet swept away. This moment of first blood: you in the hospital, yet no one to say who you are, why it happened, only that it happened here, that it happened today. © 2009 Kåre Enga [165.393] 2009-01-02 Our first stabbing of 2009 was on the other side of the bridge from where I live. I look out on Caras Park. What disturbs is the lack of follow-up by the newspaper. No word as to who nor why. Missoula is a small town in some ways. And downtown is a small town within that small town. People know each other and rarely does something happen that does not affect us. blah BLAH sunshine BLAH blah SUNSHINE: A mixed metaphor! It is sunny and bitter cold. So sunny it is difficult to see to type on the laptop. Plenty of snow in the mountains, so the skiers will be happy ... if they can get there. ![]() I wonder how his writing has influenced me in the past. I wonder how it will affect my writing in the future. One thing I know ... both of us rely on the senses and looking at life through other eyes, not just our own. MILLSTONES and MILESTONES: "First drum set" ![]() ![]() One possible note of joy: when these each reach 1,000 views by 2010, they will have been read by more people than read many of the publications out there. I'm still puttering around Blogville, gathering up strays I somehow missed ... I will have visited 100 by the end of the week end ![]() Montana: ![]() 10,309 |