Billy Rihm

1 Comments

Tags:
  • Death

    Billy Rihm


    Must be 30 years or more
    since I saw you
    And we are still
    too young
    to die.

    You were the boy
    who liked reptiles.
    We played
    together with Michael
    in that last patch
    of wilderness
    on which they built Kennedy airport.
    I see your face laughing.
    The boy
    who never called me tomboy.
    You grew in a good, solid family
    I admired and envied.
    Living your clean and ordinary life.
    I have carried you with me
    always.

    I loved you completely.
    In a child’s way.
    In adolescence we drifted.
    I haven’t known you
    underneath the husband
    and father
    and schoolteacher, and fisherman.
    An outdoorsman, it figures.
    I am certain
    you were something special.
    That same kind boy
    with blue eyes.

    We made so many trips
    to the swamps down in Kennedy.
    You and Michael are with me
    as I wade the marshes in the reserve
    outside my door in Minnesota
    And as I walk them
    frozen in winter.
    My little patch of wilderness.

    One day, the earliest in spring,
    a chickadee sang
    in a branch
    inches from my face.
    I stood, silent
    so she would stay
    and sing a while longer.

    You and Michael were there.
    Michael, the bird boy
    who moved to Australia.

    I once studied frogs
    for a few weeks (only)
    near Itasca’s Mississippi headwaters
    One of the last pristine forests, they tell me.
    A last patch of wilderness.
    I waded the swamps
    on behalf of university
    learning
    what the frogs
    are telling us
    about our world.

    You and Michael were there.
    You, the boy who liked frogs
    who settled in, closer to home.

    I wrote a poem once.
    It said
    ‘Take me to the wilderness
    to the consecrated places…’
    You and Michael; we
    shared that wonderful gift.
    That swampy, other world in New York city.

    This moment
    there is a robin
    just outside my window here
    pulling a worm from the ground
    underneath the grass.
    The day is gray and soggy.
    Perfect for the robin’s work.
    If not for that gift
    would I ever have noticed?

    Thirty and more years
    since I’ve known you.
    Now I see you standing
    Wading at the edge of the sea
    I feel I understand completely
    why you are there
    even if only
    for a while longer.

    Poem Comments

    (1)

    Please login or register

    You must be logged in or register a new account in order to
    leave comments/feedback and rate this poem.

    Login or Register

    twayneking commented on Billy Rihm

    03-06-2009

    I like this one best of all your work so far. Nicely done. Very personal. You painted pictures. We felt what those pictures meant to you. Good work.

    Poetry comes nearer to vital truth than history.

    Plato (BC 427-BC 347) Greek philosopher.

    margiekirwin’s Poems (6)

    Title Comments
    Title Comments
    Father 0
    In the City 1
    Wounded 0
    Billy Rihm 1
    Lift Off 0
    Birth of a Notion 2

    margiekirwin’s Friends (4)