ISSUE 1
December 2000


MILKWOOD REVIEW

Home

About Milkwood

Submissions

Contributors

Index

Editorial Staff

Archive







KEEPING ON Click to hear in real audio


But of course he couldn't decide.
One thing always led to another.
Like the way the lady drove down the street.
No, more like the way the dog. . .
Well, whatever it was, it was
not nearly as traumatic as the way
the man two blocks over . . .
or was it yesterday's mail? He was
lost, or so it seemed, until he learned
to plant onions amid the hollyhocks
and realized that sticking spoons
in one part of the garden attracted moonlight
long after the flowers had faded. And so,
he bought a hundred more spoons and
arranged them throughout the flowers.
He watered them. And watched them
stay the same. And let them
take the moonlight. One day he realized
he'd forgotten about the lady
and the way the dog and the man two blocks
over and the mail, and found himself
smiling, sprinkling the spoons.







Reprinted with permission
from The Texas Observer
Copyright ©
by Jack Ridl