Someone sent me a magazine. |
When I first saw the magazine I leaned against the light; it had my month and year of birth--now how can that be right? The cover showed the planet Earth, so there was lots of blue; silver letters at the top read, “It is a time for you.” I opened up the magazine to see the list of staff; then when I read the finer print I soon began to laugh. Among the names were Donald Duck, also, Felix the Cat; I saw a cute chameleon, but he was standing pat. So I turned pages to behold some pictures of the time; and I was edged with interest like edges of a dime. Of course there was no Internet and postage stamps were cheap; compared to what we hear today, there was a lot more bleep. There was no censoring per page, nor did there need to be; for everything about this zine reflected times of me. I leafed through pages to reveal a life somewhat oblique; staid chemistry and baseball star with just a touch of geek. The images of faces gone, the lilies in the field; relationships both good and bad, some memories revealed. The innocence of childhood, a deep ravine Tarzan; way back into the womb of time when consciousness began. Astronomy and model planes, touch football in the street; both books and balls of every size, a scholarly athlete. The splash of quarry in the sun, ice skating in the cold; the shrinking of a violet, then learning to be bold. It wasn’t only photographs, but articles spoke too; and as I read I felt as if a harmony rang true. With all connections, great and small, upon the face of Earth, I thought of life’s divergent ways, and realized the worth. There in time’s bubble, I was left to dream within time’s dream, from words of periodical, direct, and full of gleam, as if the sun took time for me, a speck beneath the sky, well-lighted in a magazine when time gave me the eye. 32 Lines |