AUTISM: A POEM
. . . . . XXXII. Following Alex
. . . . . 1
A lone motorboat cuts like a blade
. . . . . through blue lake water as a couple
of clouds attach like lint to the high
. . . . . sky and a few ring-billed gulls slide
by, drifting above in whatever wind
. . . . . remains. Alex steps past last night’s
collected debris, sticks of driftwood
. . . . . and gathered shells left after a storm.
Along the shoreline, its rough edge
. . . . . still fringed by frayed white threads
of breaking waves, we watch a dog
. . . . . make its way toward the low mounds
of dunes bordering a line of pines—
. . . . . old and twisting within their shadows.
. . . . . 2
Beside these trees, spring blossoms
. . . . . now flower, flashes of red or yellow
sneaking among the facade of green.
. . . . . Once more, my wife and I allow Alex
to lead. We follow as he steers us
. . . . . near the water line, where damp sand
shines, glistening under an angled
. . . . . slant of sunlight, and when we listen
to his laughter after each awkward
. . . . . toss of beach pebble splashes its ring
in a deeper distance he can reach,
. . . . . we excuse that lagging in language
and take his cue, simply satisfied
. . . . . by such a sound expressing delight.
You capture the silence of fine poetry.
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