Yesterday was Father’s Day. Tomorrow the Summer
Solstice which will be at 4:13 am Central Daylight Time. On this interim day we will revisit Such
a calendar coincidence when both fell on the same day seven years
ago and moved me to the commission
of poetry like a prune juice and X-Lax smoothie facilitates an explosive
bowl movement. Depending on
your outlook the results may be equally as messy and disgusting.
Some
ancient peoples marked the Solstice
occasion with such astonishing precision
involving monoliths, mounds, and monuments that it has enabled a basic cable cottage industry of pseudo-science documentaries speculating about aliens. But for many others, the precise date was hard to pin
down. Changes to the length of day were too subtle to be measured precisely. Instead,
they spread out the celebration over a cluster of days under various names. Modern
Pagans, who have made up a lot
of stuff to fill in the gaps of what is known call
those days Litha after and old Anglo-Saxon name for a summer month. Taken together the various pre-Christian celebrations are often lumped together as Midsummer, as good a name as any.
Was
Father’s day, at least subconsciously
set in spitting distance of Midsummer
if not on the precise day? Probably not. But there are those who say that there is no such thing as pure coincidence. Call it kismet
or serendipity, it was enough to
set my head spinning and impel my
fingers on the keyboard.
Summer Solstice/Father’s Day
June 21, 2015
Perhaps, after all, I am the Green Man,
and my
Father before me
who
took to the woods with rod and rifle
and
his father before him
who
grew strawberries by the porch
and
the fathers before him
who
were orchard men in Ohio
and
back to those earlier yet
who
pulled stones from Cornish fields
for
their masters.
Save the complexion, I look the part enough
With shaggy
goatee, wild eyebrows,
and
neglected hair which could sprout
oak
and ivy.
But my wild forest years are well behind me,
I plant nothing but my feet on the
sidewalk
and
my butt in a desk chair,
I raise nothing but questions,
concerns,
and indignation,
my fertility was snipped away
long decades past
my virility—don’t make me laugh,
no Goddess awaits in a glade
under the triumphant
Sun.
Perhaps I am not
the Green Man after all
just an old fool and fraud,
but, hey, isn’t that all that is
needed
to be just Dad instead.
—Patrick Murfin
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