Man in Sunflowers

 
He suffered a private madness,
   the question “What am I doing here?”,
   always lurking, clinging,
 
An affliction unrevealed
   to others, friend or otherwise,
   a boring, trite obsession.
 
Corn and wheat sped by,
   muddled worries interrupted
   by a solitary figure in sunflowers,
 
Shabby, in dark hat and overcoat,
   looking, eye level, at a single flower,
   staring, in turn, at the sun —
 
A half-second snapshot
   instantly replaced by more
   corn, wheat, sunflowers.
 
“What is he doing there?”,
   he thought, knowing it
   was already unknowable,
 
Knowing he was neither
   bored nor offended by a
   worthy but unanswerable question,
 
Knowing that he was,
   finally freed
   by the third person, singular.
 

Barnaby’s Thistle

As he walked,
   his hand touched
   a beautiful flower
   and bled.
 
He saw St. Barnaby’s thistle,
   and wondered if
   Barnabas had ever brushed
   against his namesake,
 
And, if so,
   was he
   divinely protected
   from the golden needles?
 
His hand began to itch and
   he thought of Barnabas
   who argued with his mentor
   and was slowly forgotten.
 
In his obscurity,
   did the saint ever ponder
   yellow flowers as these
   with crowns of thorns?