
Nolo Segundo, pen name of retired English/ESL teacher [America, Japan, Taiwan, Cambodia] L.j Carber, became a published poet in his 8th decade in over 170 literary journals in 13 countries. A trade publisher has released 3 collections in paperback on Amazon: The Enormity of Existence [2020]; Of Ether and Earth [2021]; and Soul Songs [2022]. These titles reflect an awareness he’s had for over 50 years since having an NDE whilst almost drowning in a Vermont river: That he has—IS—a consciousness that predates birth and survives death, what poets since Plato have called the soul.
A Morning’s Walk
My wife and I walk every morning, a mile or so-- it’s good for us old to walk in the cold, or in the misty rain, it makes less the pain that old age is wont to bring to bodies which once burned bright with youth, though now I wear braces on ankles, braces on knees, and I walk slowly with 2 canes, like an old skier, sans snow, sans mountain. We passed a tree whose leaves had left behind summer’s green and now fall slowly, carefully one by one in their autumnal splendor. My wife stopped me-- listen she said-- but I heard nothing—hush!, stand still, she said, and I tried hard to hear the mystery…. Finally I asked her, knowing my hearing less than my wife’s (too many rock concerts in my heedless youth), what we listen for? She looked up at my old head, and smiled-- only she could hear the sound each leaf made as it rippled the air in falling to the ground.
THE CARESS OF WORDS
When I read a poem that breathes, pulses with its own heartbeat, relentless, compelling in its own desire-- I feel touched as by another, some unseen hand brushing my hair, lips as light as air licking the flesh near my own sojourning heart… and I return the caress as my hand glides ever questing o’er the soft and solid paper, my eyes rolling over the printed page like a hawk seeking prey, looking with the desire of the wild at the naked words, unclothed by any convention, unsoiled by any deceit. A good poem is a lover-- a great poem, a great lover, the kind you never forget.
The Old Tracks
In my town and only 90 feet from my house Run a pair of old tracks, Railroad tracks older Than my house, even Older than me, and I Am become old, very, Very old, like a tree Whose branches Betray it with Every strong wind And fall to ground Leaving less and Less of the tree. I used to walk in Between those Carefully laid Iron rails, stepping On the worn wood Of the old ties as Though they were Made of glass…. I walked the length Of my small town, I walked the world. I walked where Passenger trains Carried lives and Their once warm, Now cold, dreams And I was part of Each life, now gone To ether and mist, And so too my Lonely soul will Ride those rails One bright day. Still, a freight train Comes by once or Even twice a week, And I thrill to hear Its wailing horn as it cries out for a forgotten glory, and the ground still shakes a bit as the old train lumbers slowly by my house and I wait a holy wait For the music of Its rumbling and The cry of its old Heart as a young Engineer pulls the Whistle and sees Not that he is Driving eternity.

Loved these! All a poetical flow – a confident stepping of lived experiences – there penned to share. The kind of writing that holds you; pulls one into being part of it. So wonderful to read.
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