Unexpected Places
We had been warned about the Monet
by the sandy, yet soft, voice in the foyer
who warned us that we did not have enough
time to appreciate any one of the works
these masters had swallowed years with,
with the lingering hour before
the halls darkened for another storm-kissed night.
Maybe I uncovered my own oversight
at not thinking that I could find
a Monet, a Manet, a Seurat, or a Pissaro
within the bounds of the city
where boundaries and states lose distinction
somewhere between flatness and grass.
Seeing a Van Gogh mixed in with the rest
convinced me even more
that some unexpected places and some expected times
align enough to accentuate in relief
what hangs in front of me for days and days,
even if only for two weeks a year.
We may not ask to find
the works of art
museums allow us to see on display;
the same could be said
for the people we find ourselves with,
beautiful Americans from everywhere and nowhere
creating a life more color than water,
yet I enjoy their stories far more
than my own landscape lost
among dozens of the same sort of satisfying strife.