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Ed Lahey

Old Butte Rat


I will not end up like the beggar
with the sign that reads "Need Food," even though,
of course, honesty may be everything.

I think a philosopher should have something to talk about,
a writer something to write about. I have never been able to
do more than declare I was a chip on the foamy river,
and on the chip. Hey, I say, I'm still afloat.

Rumi wrote, "Beyond ideas of wrong doing,
beyond ideas of right doing,
there is a field. I'll meet you there."

I wonder who might bring bread? That's what I wonder.
Why a field? I'll meet ya in the alley I say. Of course, I am
from Butte, not Silky Persia or Smooth Move, Amerika.

Still. It is the Indian Paint Brush Flowers
and Bear Grass that get to me, as I fork through the sausage
of current affairs, remembering the sacred little mining
operations of the past.

It is also the sky without contrail.
To gaze at the heavens now is to peer through
a shattered windshield,
cracked up by lawless noisy aircraft.

Sometimes, I catch a glimpse of blue...



Ed Lahey is a writer and teacher who hails from Missoula, Montana.


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04.13.2000
Philip Dacey from Lynd, MN

Yeah.
What's Kyle Cameron's problem? Note he (she?) does not bother to explain. But anybody who can quote Rumi in a poem and give him a context that measures up to that standard deserves all the stars. The poem has a casual air about it--casual like a fox. It's a measured portrait by means of an invented voice.



04.12.2000
Bonny Wolfe from Missoula, MT

A clear voice, with soul.
All of Ed's poems are wonderful, rich and intellegent. The world is blessed, indeed, with true poets like Ed Lahey.



04.05.2000
Kyle Cameron from dartmouth Nova Scotia

CRAP
BBBBBOOOOOO







©2000 Gumball Poetry.