ADVENTURE
“…An adventure is only an inconvenience
rightly considered.”
G.K. Chesterton
Adventures happen every day for kids at play,
no need for mind-altering drugs to see what others
fail to see creating a magic stew of wizardry.
A sub-zero empty fridge box becomes a domicile
with shuttered windows, trap doors and slits
for email and parcel post deliveries, passwords
crayoned in secret code, credit card numbers
on the backs of father’s old business cards
allowing ATM cash dispersals of $100 green
crepe paper bills slipped through official slots.
Crumpled piles of newspapers are mountains cowboys
must surmount while getting shot at with marbles,
beans and mothballs hidden in mother’s shoes.
One child paws the floor, neighing like a spooked horse
before galloping around the fort, turning the toddler’s bike
upside down into a cannon firing boom- boom cannon balls
until a white flag of surrender appears.
Inside the fort younger kids ignore the battle, huddled
in a corner gleefully pounding on a drum, jumping up and down
to an ear-piercing pennywhistle, rattling maracas, marimbas,
tambourines and banging on a toy xylophone,
a cacophony of God-awful sound like a Mahabharata jazz quintet
while mother mixes pancake batter for breakfast
before rushing them off to school.