Flumes Vol. 6: Issue 1, Summer 2021 | Page 14

5

une alluvion

D.W. Stojek

That day there was a perfect paragraph of green grass, resolutely

demanding to be read: begin with tone, if you will, the conjunction

of bellflowers and timorous phlox indicating a passage of immodest

reflection that leads one forth, a caesura of twigs fallen from

the same maple that shades this page...

Midway through, the clearing-cough, as a patch of weeds interject,

as if to startle the swallow,

Alighting.

A pair of moths diacritically flit:

together a tilde, an umlaut when they split. Dandelions punctuating

like little suns implicating, bickering, over semantics, a switch that threatens the entire enterprise. We are, finally, brought to root (decaying as it does

to rot); concluding with the ash furred squirrel whose tail curls into a query mark.

So engrossed, I had not noticed the cast of the sky when my Mother

beckoned me back into the house from my afternoon outside in the side

yard. I gathered up my odd troop of wooden figures: farmers (these two had been wrestling tubers from their fields, both men, grim in their endeavors,

but pleasant at heart), a postman, who had spent the majority of his day