BOOK LOUSE
Reading
at the dining table,
I
saw from the corner of my sight,
one
of the periods moving
across
the page.
I
watched it make its way
over
the paper.
It
had some destination in mind.
Did
not run around like ants do,
but
headed straight east
onto
the tablecloth’s
four
feet of white desert.
I
could not think of how to help it,
as
once I saved an orange
caterpillar
from sure death
by
turning him at the edge
of
a hot two lane blacktop,
heading
him back into the grass.
But
this speck of being?
Where
did it come from?
Where
was it going?
In
the vast world,
would
it ever find a lover,
or
a friend?
Peggy Trojan, former
English teacher, enjoys retirement in the north woods of Wisconsin. Widely
published in journals and anthologies: Boston Literary Magazine, Naugatuck
River Review, Echoes, Your Daily Poem, Wilda Morris Poetry Challenge and
others. She is the author of two chapbook collections: Everyday Love
(2014) and Homefront (Evening Street Press, 2015). Her full length poetry
collection, Essence (Portage Press, 2015), is the most
recent publication.
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