The Crypt
Shady, the Basilica, cool
light filtering through paned
windows, draws a path,
through redwoods it marbles
the ground, a creek or a bird’s whisper.
Christ looks down from the apse.
I descend into the crypt,
Saint Ambrose lies in a glass casket—
a skeleton—in bishopric robes.
I sit with him, my holdfast,
with a fallen redwood too,
look for conversation
in places born sacred.
Ghazal of the Soccer Ball
Murano lies just across Venice, a short motoscafo ride:
Seven tiny islands linked by bridges, cradled by lagoon tide.
Waves of tourists wash ashore, surge, rattle glass
sparkling in shop windows, beckoning the buyers’ tide.
As the sun lingers on the western edge poised to dive,
from the motoscafo we alight, swim against the departing visitors’ tide.
Vaporous light glazes canal-side houses in wide brushstrokes,
silence seeps into Murano’s calli and campi like a king tide.
Footsteps, conversations, front doors closing—
chimes of lives lived to the rhythm of the lagoon’s tide.
A soccer ball rolls towards us and he rescues it,
tosses it back to the children playing at eventide.
In the sunset’s glow lighting window panes, I catch a glimpse
of a bobbing sphere: the soccer ball riding the tide.
In Murano, where glass balls hang in windows,
a plastic soccer ball is let go, like time and tide.
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