Picasso in Paradise
by Karen Lewis

    He's an artful driver,
    willing to veer from laid path of pavement-
    Picasso, with a steering wheel.
    Bare-shouldered women scream their fear
    as he belligerently dodges
    the shrill horns of his critics.
    His father taught him
    to call the fares, 'friend'.
    Pampered free birds, to his own
    way of thinking, birds with the ability
    to schedule desire.
    His taxi is filled with the things they
    can afford to leave behind:
    DuMaurier cigarettes, sunglasses,
    a canteen of water.

    His peppercorn eyes throw flirtatious glances
    at the native women who cross his path -
    their broad smiles snatch
    his sweet chocolate offerings.
    A touch of his firm belly would reveal
    the washboard patterns of sand
    that surround him.

    Each day delivers more
    obnoxious breezes, heavy with birds.
    Into the crevasse of his night they fall,
    squawking and melting,
    then re-emerging,
    dismembered cubist specters.
    They torment him with things
    he will never see.
    Snakes, rabbits, four lane highways.

    During the hibiscus yellow light of day
    he craves a larger canvas.
    Frustration wells; high tide of contempt
    flooding his geographic reality.
    These 'friends' drive twenty miles just for dinner.
    He has never known the twenty-first mile,
    driving in never-ending circles
    around the perimeter of paradise.






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