Monday, August 31, 2015

Hope Springs

Don't we always long to do the perennial dance of the seasons? Maybe it's even more important to revisit the places we have loved as we sense our lives closing.

These two purple afternoon shadows
take time to cross the restaurant floor.
The woman, frayed, disheveled,
peers through sea glass above a tired shawl.
He bends and bobs like a dandelion ready to blow.
She is tethered to her partner by years
and plastic tubing from the tank she bears.
He steps and halts, steps and halts, steps and halts.
They waltz the distance to their table
overlooking the harbor.

"I thought you had him leashed," I tease carefully.
"I do," she says, "or maybe he has me."
He chortles, chokes, then rests his head.

"We've come here every year," she confesses,
"April and October.
I didn't have the courage last fall,
but it's April...."

Friday, August 28, 2015

Follow the Lie

Okay. So maybe I'm jaded these days.

Follow it back in history
over aprons and cake mixes
and blue-eyed baby dolls,
and nights spent in factories
and in smoky bars
through narrow berths in stinking holds
or lofty staterooms above,
to cramped cottages
or up the castle stairs
in and out of beds with bolsters
or simply bracken,
past casks of wine
and gold coin of every realm.
See the lifting of a veil.
Hear the whisper,
Trust me.
Trace it all the way back
to the promise of a missing rib
and see the unfolding
of all broken hearts.

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Imrama for Bruce

So often my poems are for family or friends who have died.  Is this my task--to memorialize?  This one is for a dear friend from Pinebrook days and was written after studying the myths of Celtic adventure/spiritual journeys.

There is never a good death, though some
may make a crossing smooth.
As paper burns, the body shrivels: life leaves.
Thousands die every day.
Imagine the sound of compounded mourning.
Yet blessed the one who flies
on drafts of tears, prayer-borne,
trusted into Love's center,
who leaves behind a wake of laughter
and faith-arrows aimed straight.

Death's sting is in the cup
we do not fill with tea.

Hush now.  We will be soothed
with words of glory land, and we will
strike our oars like the brave men of Bran,
Brendan and Maeldune
and sail forth on life's sea to find
our companion, all shining,
waiting for us on the distant shore.

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Nearer to What I Fear

for Barbara Marshall  (1941-2006)

Too sugary--you call me Sweetie--
but here we are, broken ribs
and babysitting your new grandson.
As your bones knit we spend hours
purling the separate sleeves of our stories
to our common new lives in Maine.

The first night you come to dinner
I want to use the dishwasher,
but you fondle the plates with a dish towel.
It's the least I can do, you say. At home
my meals are in front of the refrigerator.

You wipe a plate.  Sweetie, you say,
you're a writer.
Write about what you fear.
Take off your counselor's hat, Barb.
I just want you for a friend.

            The pinks and blues and the yellows--
          hot colors and a dash of the wild!
          Spiked hair of a pixie and mischievous grin
          covering deep-seated people-wisdom.
          Your dogs you treat like your babies.
          Baby chortles with joy.
          Sons shine like the stars they are
          in your sky.
          Friendships fill a hundred lifetimes;
          Visits of pain and loneliness and
          T.V. news fill the space in your bed,
          but shoots of forgiveness begin to show.
          Homecoming starts to grow.
                                                           Oh, my friend.

I am afraid, you say on Wednesday night.
A different pain.  What if I die alone?
You're not going to die!
On Friday you say, "I feel great!"
On Sunday--
          heartbroken, misguided soothsayer, I.



       




Monday, August 24, 2015

Sunset Over Belfast

"The sun sets in the cold without friends..." (W.S. Merwin, Dusk in Winter)

Merwin's sun sets friendless, reproachless,
and yet tonight the sun lingered,
loathe to leave the stage.
It blushed the belly of each witnessing cloud,
like the touch of a grand dame
on a courtier's cheek as she exits.
It seemed intent on defining once, for all,
the color gold by trailing
miles and miles of purple complement.

Thursday, August 20, 2015

I Married the Man from Pittsburgh

This was a birthday gift to Neil one year.

I never held you but I thought of the devil
with two blue eyes and tongue of honeyed gold.
I saw the rise of industry in those eyes--
cloudless blue and steel and plate glass reaching for the sky.
Three Rivers ran through me
every time we joined. Floating Swann on Sundays,
and I was hit by the echo of the crack of Roberto's bat
on the ball, and you were always   always
                                                                  on   the   ball.

Suit and tie and briefcase--dressed
for success--except you chewed your nails.
You took half your worry out on those fingertips,
but when you fingered me
I felt like hot, smoky notes thumped from a bass
in the corner of a darkened bar.
You were not musical, but you played me, Ace,
and daylight broke through stained glass
in the little church on Fourth and Broad.

Nights, we played Fleetwood Mac so loudly
the neighbors knocked.
The streets of town overflowed with snow,
and everywhere    everywhere
                                               falling laughter.



Thursday, August 13, 2015

To Honor Eddie Klump

A small, bent man accompanied
my elderly father to our Easter dinner.
Shy, ashen-faced, crook-legged,
he was beyond our attempts
to imagine him a soldier
in the khaki of WWII with
gun clutched to shoulder,
other arm swinging free.
He rushed an enemy turret?
No, surely not this pale man in paler suit.
Fifty years ago time in a German
prison camp took the color
from his life and earned him
a purple heart for bravery and pain.
Here, some Sunday School grace:
Mother gone, my father
adopted this stray and ancient waif,
and bequeathed him to my husband's care
and a home in the V.A. hospital.

We honor those who "gave their all,"
but what about those
whose all was taken?  All, that is, but a loose
thread of future unwinding into days
of borrowed families; Sunday services;
playing cards with other vets; emptying mind
into the vacuum of t.v. and
a drink with a consoling woman.
No wife to share his painful bed.
No children to laugh him into
the day after tomorrow.

Rest now, Soldier.
In the 60 years since that prison
door opened for you,
you have lived only for the glory of
this moment--
to lay beside your brothers
in Arlington's rows of white.

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Vigils

What do these
watching angels want
whose wingtips brush my skin?
In darkness sleeping bones
can feel their stare, but though love itself
unlock their tongues, whispered
glossalalial glorias are all I'd hear.
What would they say,
were not the lost language of Eden involved?

Small hours,
small mind.
Tawdry life that's more turned pages
than lived.
Yet I do not feel accused
by them, but by what writhes
to rise through wrinkled skin,
to stand with them beyond our dying stars,
beyond their mute desire.

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

The Witches of Belfast

I think I know where the witches live
in my town.  In my town I'm sure they dwell
          where lintels capture shooting stars;
          where contented cats sleep on window sills;
          where a gable flies an angel.

You can tell their homes by the gardens.
In gardens wild and bright you can see
          profusion of sage and bee balm,
          chicory, sunflowers, marguerite,
          bleeding hearts at the very least.

Witch-homes may not be tidy
but often they are small.  Small and overflowing
          with painted colors, all broken and chipped,
          and cracked plates under flower pots,
          and sea glass and cookies in jars.

The residents of a witch-house fly
but not usually in the air, though in trembling air
           the butterflies banner between blooms;
           feeders magnetize finches and doves,
           and for all of them witches care.

Magic rises from rooftops
in the misty, morning air.  In the morning air floats
          breathfuls of baking bread,
          laughter of children's surprise
          the quiet as poems arrive.

Some witches don't own their magic
in my town. In my town they are unaware
          of mysterious powers within.
          They sing and paint, plant and create,
          suffer broken hearts--
          but they live whole-heartedly.





Monday, August 10, 2015

For James Joseph

It's been a while.  Friends came to Maine. Neil came to work with me on the house. Eric joined us for the weekend's work and enjoyment of the gorgeous weather of this last week--clouds with their stuffings coming out; heaven-blue skies; temps in the 70's with breezes from the east holding the scent of ocean that made me sigh. Now I have cleaning and laundry to do.  That's the best impetus for me to work on writing. So back to the poems.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Had it been India, we would have
burned your body on a funeral pyre
sun-up to sundown, staying with you,
turning the bones until all are ash.
All day we would have wept, prayed,
chanted together for your soul's safe journey.

But this is mainstream America.
No oparri here to sing your life and mourn,
to flesh out the man we see in the coffin.
We need collected stories
of memories and explanation--
why your hair is flecked with gray
and you dead at twenty-nine.

Here in the funeral parlor
no outward expression but seeping tears,
no scattering of petals nor paintings.
We aunties and uncles
are not the Indian mourners who will
stay with the family, cleaning,
cooking, comforting, playing dice
in between their shifts.
Your mother was dead ten years ago
on the same day you left us.
Your girlfriend wasn't invited
because of family politics.
The solicitous funeral director
funnels our grief
into cans of acceptable behavior.

You were the known child but
the unknown man, Jay,
caught in an irresistible drain of drugs.
You are the story unfinished, the sentence
ending irrationally with a colon: