Gecko

Written
1992

 Dart, slither, jump

       and change color.

Red, green, then brown.

       Hide from me.

Don't move and blend

      into the foliage

      or the rock crevice.

But when you ride my pointing finger,

       you are as happy as can be.

Why did you hide?

Have you learned

        from the romance novels

        about being a bit reluctant

        to be better appreciated when caught?

Do not the story tellers among you

       report the delight of a warm finger?

Now living in the cage of flowers

       and fed crickets are you not

       the top of the evolutionary pyramid?

You look as if you were there

       in the Mesozoic swamps.

What would some of your

        dinosaur relatives have thought

       if they knew that

       if they waited long enough,

        they to could ride out the day

        on a warm finger.

So stop darting ,   

      jumping and slithering

      and come ride my pointing finger.

Pretend you are

        the hood ornament on a Porche

        or a brave sailor

         staring into the eye of a storm

        with hair and beard

        cutting the wind.

Be an explorer looking

        for a Northwest Passage,

        or an Indian Scout searching for buffalo.

But answer me this:

       how did you learn to be

       so coquettishly hard to catch

       and then the heroic finger rider?

Perhaps your task is that of a mirror

        through which I can walk

        to see the Life metaphor all the better.

 

Notes
This poem was written for my grandson, Alex, who loved Geckos and caught them in Kauai. he was able to bring some of them home. They were everywhere on the island