You must arrive early at the old country store,
parking lot’s small. Find a seat, a bite to eat,
glass of wine, check the time then look around
for Bobby Midnight and his band. Tables are full,
people standing, yak-yaking crowds the space,
baby peers from pack on back, one mama runs
to fetch her child, senior fans refill their drinks,
and friends hail friends with rowdy hugs.
One, then two, all six show up, beat up cases
held in hand, hats buoyant on thin-haired heads.
They shuffle on stage, open up bags, pull out
possibilities: three guitars quiver, trumpet and sax
glitter, stacked set of drums sits. These man-boys
lean in to get the tuning right. The crowd booms
then quiets as if testing for song. Oh, there’s going
to be some music on this warm spring night.
Funky tunes fly, fill the room, seep out windows
step out doors. Dancing couples, women clusters,
dad with a daughter all pack the floor of that
overhauled space. One man and a woman are fluid
in leather bottomed shoes, possessed. They swoon,
sweat, press for more Billy Joel’s rock and roll.
The local birdman holds a gallon pickle jar,
trolls the room crying: gratuities for the band.
Riding home, the man and woman still are dancing
in the moonlight. And there it is -- bright bulging
white shines their faces, lights up hay fields,
rolls over foothills, crowns the Blue Ridge.
© Marti Snell, 2017
Dance at a Country Inn by Rafael Benjumea Carmen Thyssen Museum, Malaga, Spain from Wikimedia Commons |
1 comment:
This poem is excellent. Read it to my wife, as we are also fond of the Batesville Saturday night scene. Marti nails it! The event, all our feelings. Nice.
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