banks of that river alone, /
cold and moon-shadowed.
AND
Dancing with moonbeams/
to the stream’s soft notes was not/
enough to hold her.
What better gift could/
there be than literary/
immortality?
I should write to you/
a Happy Birthday haiku./
But an annual limerick/
is certainly just as slick,/
And so much easier to do!
I stand
as a man,
and expose
my soul
and my head
with dread,
and my heart.
Women want to see other parts:
The plump
gut or rump,
the face wrinkles,
the sprinkles
of grey
I won’t wash away.
For until we’ve met in person,
I’m a pixels of light version.
I could be real,
like what I feel,
or just a joke
made with mirrors and smoke.
I write words
some deep, some absurd
that say who I am,
and she’ll listen
and, if in tune,
she might swoon
and think me great,
and can not wait.
To greet me.
She feels romantically
inclined;
thinks I might be divine,
and just right.
But it requires sight.
We can’t be complete
until we at last meet.
I’m just paint on her palette;
a sculptor’s chisel and mallet
laying still and unused.
And she’s just my dreamed Muse.
I park
my car,
stand up, and from afar,
She sees no spark.
She feels no fun.
We’re done.
Over. Finito. Finished.
Visions once so delish
are now just pixels of light
that failed to ignite.
Words on a page
which once engaged
her mind, heart and soul,
no longer glow,
but now vanish,
and the mist
of possibility
ceases to be.
(Except, guess what?
It could be “Or Not!”)
She claimed that she was/
smitten with what I’d written;/
thus became my Muse.
Her lips purse out at/
me, virtually. I dream/
unrequitedly.
She stands, firm and grand,/
peaks surrounded by peaks, glow’d/
hair drawing me in.
What would males do/
if not woo./
vous?/
Men are so silly,/
flighty,/
willy nilly.
I think it’s only/
fair that one as fair as you/
should be often wooed.