Black Ice

This is it
Have to break the ice
It’s thin anyway
The water is very cold
It contains the necessary nutrients
For survival
Stamp my feet
Spread apart a bit
It groans and cracks
I’m ready to sink
Into the inky unknown
The polar mystery
Of what might happen
Treading lightly is done
Skating is nice but for children
My family is beyond
My universe beckons
My trials await hearing
Into the split I dive

Death of a Clown

Cast down, the full white face of a clown dies alone in the big tent, surrounded by elephants. He’s protected by a mourning shroud of trunks swung low, at half mast, a ceremony for the fellow they knew as Chuckles.

He lay in the sawdust, a fallen hero of the failing circus. A mysterious whim of death unburdened itself upon him.

The sadness is coursing in a wild frenzy around the ring. A gleaming white face is slowly fading into black. The soul of the artist rises fluidly, a tumble, a calculated fall, a snap to attention pop a flower from its lapel. Nobly it drifts up past the trapeze, he always wanted to fly with ease as they did. The company troop cheers a roaring “hoorah!,” and sends the pure spirit of the man formerly known as Charles “Chuckles” Morton, off smiling to opening night at the grand unknown show.