Divination
The diviner tripped
on his way to the pond,
dropped his bucket and
broke his two pronged stick.
In place of water he found
solid ground.
This was an awkward moment
for the future of wet clay and
not what he had in mind.
He meant to wave his
high crotched stick wide
like prison bars spread apart
the way mechanics carry
jumper cables to start
a dead car’s battery.
He meant for rain not
green moss, not a rivulet,
not a dancer’s sweating skin,
not warm velvet against the palm,
not a dog’s wet tongue,
not the feeling you get
when you wake from a dream
and realize it’s only morning
and you still have
plenty of time.