He makes a show of being different,
doesn’t PRESS HERE but punches a hole
in the sloping roof of the red half-pint
with his yellow pencil, #2 and sharp,
inserts the peeled-paper straw
like an off-kilter chimney and sucks
but the
flow
is not to his liking, incompressible fluid
clawed back by vacuum, forces we don’t foresee
in second grade, so another hole
in the opposite gable which of course invites
a second straw and then the irresistible
attraction of blowing
bubbles
in milk:
compression, current, magnificent pearlescent arc!
into the blond ponytail and down the neck
of Susan who screams and begins to cry
which summons ultimate force and compulsion
in the form of Miss Taylor,
thus ending
the experiment.
Blame physics, blame pressure & flow, blame
seven-year olds oblivious to cause and effect
and consequences, waxed folded cardstock,
aqueous emulsion, infinite possibility,
a boy’s mind and hands so eager to explore
unfettered
invention.
My old friend told me it sings
to prophesy rain
three days from now, not a bad bet this season
of afternoon thunder,
and almost forever I assumed he meant
black-cloud Corvids croaked
that cluck, that chuckle in their repertoire
of complaint & caw,
until years after he passed
I finally saw one
half-hidden in the magnolia,
barred tail
and down-curved yellow bill,
starting up
its little engine ‘til it caught, cuck-cuck-cuck,
letting me know
I’m still not half so smart as Shorty Jenkins,
gnarled and knobbed
as his sumac stick, trying to teach me names
I hadn’t even thought of yet,
reminding me to watch for lightning.
Yellow-billed Cuckoo, Coccyzus americanus