Give Me Blue
If it is a blue with no sadness in it:
the blue of the sky above Colima Volcano
with no other clouds in it except one puff
of earth’s hot breath becoming visible
in the cool morning air.
If it is a blue
with no middle ground of safety,
nothing that makes it ordinary.
No hue of boredom
or gray cast of age.
No tint of ever ending––
just pure blue
holding its mood in,
letting you feel however you want to feel.
The blue of glass that reflects the sky.
Iris blue and periwinkle.
Cerulean and cobalt.
If it is a blue with not a smudge of green in it,
or yellow or white or black.
Blue-blue like my sister’s daughter’s eyes
and like the color that a blueberry Popsicle
should be its blue dusted by nature
as though frosted, even in the heat of summer.
Like blue caught in icicles.
The color of a jellyfish
or Noxzema jar.
Bluebottle fly, tenacious,
only its color not annoying.
Blue as a shiver. Blue as blood. Blue as Hawaii.
Not the blue of a heart before forgetting.
Not that blue with a lot of
dullness soaked into it.
But if you have Blue as in Australia.
Blue as in a first place ribbon.
Sky blue,
true blue,
never blue.
Blue that if it’s ever had one gram of sadness in it,
doesn’t show it.
If you have that blue,
and you want to give it to me,
then, sure.
Give me blue.
I had to reblog this poem written in 2013 for RDP: Cobalt
Fabulous blue! Love your poem. I love the “Nozema jar” reference…perfect image of cobalt blue.
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Do they still use the cobalt jar?
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Sadly it is plastic now. But, I do remember using the glass jar when I was young….a nostalgia moment. Thank you.
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Nicely done – as a photographer I like a bit more cloud, though
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Lovely poem, Judy.
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Impressive that this creative reverie embraces a Noxzema jar cover, whose brilliant hue I’d never noticed before. Kudos!
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