Wild Bunny
The light was hazy
along the oak-lined sidewalks
as if dust had settled in the sunlight
but plants were green as fresh lettuce
so that gardens and lawns
looked impossibly ripe when I saw
a rabbit with orca markings
nibbling on some grass,
its short ears rounded like tulip leaves
and I wondered what a little, house bunny was doing loose
in someone’s yard and maybe I should call someone
because they missed their little Flopsy or Carrot,
but I stopped
because I didn’t want to see the rabbit caged,
hopping around newspaper shreddings and sucking from a plastic bottle,
no, I wanted the rabbit to wander on grass,
nibble thin stalks,
its black fur glossy and its white fur sleek,
scent of rose blossoms like silk scarves flying through the air,
caressing the nostrils and
I wanted the rabbit to be wild again
though nothing is wild in suburban yards
except perhaps for black and white bunnies
on the loose.