Recess

Beyond hopscotch chalked-out boxes, / gravel started, then a diamond

A photograph of the poet, a man with his chin in his hand and looking toward the right of the frame, against a periwinkle-blue background.
The Walrus

Granite outcrops in the schoolyard.
When you turned, maple and blue cedar,
an unkempt incline, fence, forest, a blur

of highway beyond the access road. Puddles
oozed in a downpour, mud flats
of the micro imagination. You could dig

canal rivulets with a stick you found.
Someone found the picture of a woman
on a matchbook we passed around,

boys and girls, awed by a new word, bodice.
Beyond hopscotch chalked-out boxes,
gravel started, then a diamond

where rules were schooled on strikes
and fouls. Mostly you ran. You climbed
metal bars planted in packed sand. Dennis

fell, and screamed. He got three
stitches on his chin. We were never told
that math won’t end, or, like dreams, each face

we knew would soften and vanish. Instead,
we flipped quarters at the wall, and whoever
landed theirs closest kept them all.

David O'Meara
David O’Meara has written numerous poetry collections as well as the play Disaster.