Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Mid-pitch



Mid-pitch the snow
flying off the shovel
somewhere between
blizzard and sunshine
the tethers snapped and
I was free.

Plunging into the ether
I passed through the
mirrored walls
of high seas and
pirate ships with
towering masts and
I managed to escape.

It was funny how
I only had to distract myself
from my captivity
long enough to catch sight
of the world
on the other side of the glass and
I finally had a reason.

(December 29, 2009)

In Bed Alone



This is what I found after I thought I had found myself:
Questions and they
did not seem to have answers but that did not stop
me from asking them
and driving myself crazy so that I
despaired of all I had learned and all I had
accomplished over the past couple years of hard
core learning but anyway
when the sun is shining I am ok and that is almost all
I want except at night when I am lying
in bed and I am all
by myself and I am perfect-
ly comfortable but nevertheless I am still aware
of the emptiness around me which is
as far as I can tell
the empty form
of a man
(and I don't mean God,
as though God
could take the place of
a man)
the chemical compound created by us would fill up
my bed and would spill over and flood the room and the house and the yard and
the fields in back and the world beyond and shoot into eternity and we would be
happy together in spite of and maybe even because of
all the things that may have once
irritated us about someone else but now
have transformed into nothing more and nothing less than
idiosyncracies of perfection.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

The crunch underfoot

I remember a morning
(there must have been many)
when I walked out the back door
and down the steps
(wooden, my father built them)
on my way to school
it was winter
and still with the undissolved
big red vitamin
tucked away in the side of my mouth
(lied and told my mother I had
swallowed it--an
impossibility)
now the red sweet coating worn off
and the bitter white
vitamin whose particular bitterness
even now, forty-some years
later, i can taste;
I trudged
down the gravel driveway
two long ruts from street to
backyard, the car in and out,
snow crunching underfoot
until I reached the downspout
tucked away on the side of the house
between jutting out walls and bay windows
below a tower,
there in the multicolored pool of
tiny pebbles
lying in a shallow puddle
I spit out my
vitamin,
but nothing grew
there in the spring.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Stowe

Glittering
diamonds under
rippling water
as though cast
haphazardly
into a shallow stream
and the sunlight
late afternoon's
got tangled in the facets
and blazed furiously
and angrily in its attempts
to be loosed and freed.

I do not need correcting. I know
they were not diamonds
even though I
with poetic license
claimed otherwise.
As for diamonds, yes
I know this, too. They are
common carbon rocks
forged by
geology and time and pressure
but cut into gems
and trumped into false value
for monetary gain they become nevertheless
beautiful and
still are
prized and coveted and flaunted
by women
lovers of all things
sparkly and good.

I was only pretending
when I said
that I walked toward
gemstones
when I was pulled toward
the stream
by fragments of something
ephemeral lying under
water
reflecting sunlight
left behind in
Stowe.

Saturday As The Snow Fell

Something had come to me when I was
standing at the kitchen sink,
like a light had been turned on and what was dark became visible,
or a comparison had been made that was stark in its clarity,
and then
without warning,
it was gone.

I do not recall if it was about snow
or travel, if it was about the children or
about divorce, if it was about holidays
or every day, if it was about learning or talking,
or
if it was about something else entirely.

But
given my bent--
poetry, love, longing, fate--
I have an inkling
an idea
the faintest reminder
that it probably had something to
do with
you and me,

which is
to say
fate longing love and
something just like this.

(December 26, 2009)

Friday, December 11, 2009

In honor of Baudelaire's Tristesses de la Lune

Sorrows of the Moon

Tonight the moon is dreaming lazily
a seductress in languid repose, her cushioned bed,
the roundness of her breast, gentle caress of idle hands,
a tender hush, closer now to sleep

Soft pillow of night, she drifts upon the satin slide of sky,
and swooning, drapes herself quietly down,
sleepy eyes regarding the sapphire heavens
deep blue darkness dotted with blossoms of white

Behold what errant tear escapes her languid gaze
and reflecting iridescence,
drops swirling into the mist of evening;
still awake, a poet, reverential villain of sleep

reaches forth, cupped hand trembling to receive
the liquid opal of the moon,
draws limpid treasure back, tucks it in to sleep within his heart,
hidden, safe, secure, far from the brilliance of the sun.

Il est doux

Il est doux, doux comme un ciel de velours,
Il est si doux, comme la chaleur d'un four,
Doux, c'est lui, comme un rêve fugace
Bien doux, très doux, comme une prière de grâce.

Mon amour est doux comme l'aube d'été,
Plus doux encore, comme un baiser jeté,
Sa voix aussi chère, comme la chanson des fées,
Étonnant, doux, comme une nuit étoilée.

Sa touche est si tendre, légère,
Ses yeux sont si gentils, brun-verts.
Son poème était un cadeau surprise,
Sa douceur, voila, une colombe grise

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Creaking of Beds

That was the familiar creak
of the climbing into bed
a fleeting sound
on the reel.
A dusting off of both feet
swish swish
against one another
lights out.
Sinking into night
side by side but
lives and continents
apart.

Tired springs of
another bed shared
years earlier
monsters hid underneath.
In the night
I would leap over
the moat of painted floor
to avoid their reach.
Pull up covers, not dare to
look over the side of the bed
kept eyes from the looming closet
its door creaking alone.

Now it's just me
hauling myself up
into the high bed
vast ocean for one.
I set sail into dreams
push off the dusty shore
littered with books
and poetry.
I close the doors to
closets and sweep
the monsters from
under the bed.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Amy's Dad Died Yesterday








Amy's dad died yesterday
when she was on her way home
from another funeral.
Just last week
her husband had a phone call
and heard the news
his father had died.
A hurried trip across country
by plane and up into
Canada to hear kaddish.
Shovels of dirt onto a casket
in cold ground,
the end of a life once held behind
barbed wire.
She and two of her sons,
the oldest away at college
in the midst of final exams,
flew towards home while her husband
stayed behind to
sit shiva with his mother.

In between flights in Chicago
Amy called her sister across the lake
just saying hello,
and heard the news
their father was in the hospital,
heart attack.
Later that afternoon
it was already too late;
there was nothing they could do
but keep him comfortable.
She called her husband
to interrupt his grieving
with her own.
He will fly home in a snowstorm today.

A little later
the other call came
that he had died
and then Amy began
making her own calls.
I am sad inside
and winter does not help,
the nausea has returned.
Sometimes a giving up of the ghost
sounds like a relief
if you are the one doing it.

Now Amy is planning another trip
for another funeral.
Blizzards complicate December travel.
This time the two boys will stay home
with their father,
the oldest still busy with college exams,
and Amy will come alone
to the cold
winter of home and death.

Before he died,
her brother said
and her sister agreed,
their father said, "Oh!"
as though he had seen
something grand
or someone dear
and a smile broke across his face,
sedated though he was.
The look
like he was running
toward happiness
lingered
until death.

I was loading groceries
into my car
when Amy told me
all this
and snow was swirling
all around
and it was dark
and very cold
and I was suddenly very sad
and alone
and wished for arms to run to
myself
arms backlit by firelight and warmth
and most of all
love
and knew I did not have them.

Many years ago
I answered another phone call.
My son was perhaps three
and now he is more than twenty years
past that.
It was Amy, crying.
I remember the exact words she said
Mom died.
Last night, after she told me
about what happened just before
her father died,
Amy said, crying,
"I think Mom came to get him."