sitting at a squared off table,
in a room, in a world created
by squared off minds.
I have always loved
a rambling ramshackle story
set in an old house where rooms
were added over time as needed,
not by some architect’s preconceived notion
of the art of efficiency.
If the story leads me up a staircase in the dark
on missions ordered by untrustworthy relatives,
if night is protected by two riders approaching
if the afternoon sun glitters on signs of broken glass
Pointing to forests where beautiful nymphs
are burned at the stake
for the crime of being free.
If I sit by a wandering stream
looking for candid flies
under the clear water,
I will not square off my tale
to fit your meter nor your form.
I am not afraid of your squared off god,
he will never enter
the round rooms of my soul.