Can we fly?
Do we fly?, the question
begged, as a Korean
winter swirled into our
apartment, baby
swirling within a womb.
We cried, but no matter.
Questions need answers,
questions need answers.
Singers sang in
subterranean suites;
Samoans sold fruit in the
alley and gave us Spock-like
salutes; seranades of
ajima soared upward;
bus stewards stopped for no
one on the third route 'round
Seoul, hat shadowing
steely eyes and a countenance
that only wanted to
go home.
We could go home, all right,
the doc said it would be the
last week to fly,
and the calendar became a
knell that freed. Taxi drivers
driving like salmon upstream
scared us less than the days on
a page.
Would we go?
Would we stay?
Shrimpburgers squealed sounds
of something - we should have
known - and made the
decision easy; food poisoning &
an IV type can persuade even
the heartiest to rest.
Bags lugged emotional and
tangible things that only
weighted the taxi down as it
whisked us to the airport,
through January snow.
Friday, February 10, 2006
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1 comment:
I like the first part the best.
And the last part.
And the title.
And the salmon taxi drivers and squealing shrimpburgers.
And me being included.
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