Archive for the ‘poetry’ category

“Villanelle to Glasses”

March 11, 2012

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Another week beginning, and here’s a new picture prompt from Tess Kincaid of Magpie Tales.  The real photograph by Uzengia Aleksander Nedic  is somewhat blurry;  my version (not blurry enough) is above, and my poem below.  I am also linking this poem to “Imaginary Gardens with Real Toads” for their Monday Open Link Day.

Villanelle to Glasses

Without glasses, the edges of my world are furred
like the ending of an echo, crush of shale.
Ideas are seen as if through water, blurred,

trooping muzzily through head, not shaped by word,
as if mind’s eye can’t make out thought’s detail
without glasses, the edges of my world so furred.

Then, too, I find my verbal memory’s slurred:
I’ll say this “peach” for onion, “kite” for sail;
ideas are seen as if through water, blurred,

and though I tell myself I’m quite absurd–
my mind’s still good, it’s only eyes that fail–
without glasses, the edges of my world are furred.

Even corrected vision’s not assured,
each type of lens its own peculiar jail,
where ideas are seen as if through water, blurred,

and I must make a choice between page or bird,
eternal grain of sand/horizon’s trail.
Without glasses, the edges of my world inferred, 
ideas are seen as if through water, blurred.

Have a nice (fully-lit and clear) Sunday.  And, if you get a chance, check out:  comic novel,NOSE DIVE,  book of poetry, GOING ON SOMEWHERE, or children’s counting book 1 MISSISSIPPI. )

“Winter Break, 1999”

March 10, 2012

The wonderful Shawna is hosting a dVerse Poets Pub poetics prompt on “1999”.  (I have to confess to having spent the whole day writing about 1969, till I realized I’d missed a digit!)

But 1999 had its own ethos, so I slowly, awkwardly, switched gears/years.  (1969, in this case, will have to come later.)

Winter Break, 1999

I remember at the Christmas party edge
of Y2K, the DUI guy telling me
how he planned to sneak a new license
once the DMV went down.

And how so many worried that planes
would crash that prices for flights
leaving New York City New Year’s Eve
plummeted, even flights across
the world with free champagne.

What a pain it was back then to
get to Lower Broadway from the
West-–you had to either go through
the Towers or around, and it was
a long long way around–

Taking a break upstate, where the power did go out,
not because of the glitch of far computer, but
wires down nearby, a thick wet snow
webbing all in glassine sparkle–

Going through a long hike too,
the Towers’ lobbies maddeningly
grandiose, soaring glass bordered by the swish
of world flags, red carpet as
thick as a wad of wonga–

With no heat, we laid fires for
the others, finding our own in the
flicker of sculpted muscle against
smooth skin; how mad it felt,
that really and truly caring
what others thought, we
dared try for the real and true–

And yet, how glad–to be
in your close, warm arms
and not on one
of those cheap world flights, not because
I feared the planes would crash–no, that
just wasn’t one of the things I worried about
back then, planes crashing–

(PS – beautiful photo is candlelit snow igloo made by certain family members at the time of a later snow.)

Free Verse/Triolet – “Trapped Heart,” “After Lashing Out”

March 10, 2012

(Sorry- this heart in chains--"trapped" but perhaps not quite what the poem envisions.)

Here’s kind of an interesting exercise for those interested in the ways in which form shapes content.  The first is a draft poem in “free” verse;  the second is a triolet (a form recently highlighted by Gay Cannon and Samuel Peralta in dVerse Poets Pub “form for all”) which I wrote the next morning.   Oddly, I am also linking this post to “Imaginary Gardens With Real Toads”, for their prompt about love and affection, since the poems deal with their backwash.

 

Trapped Heart 

And then you come to a time
when you are willing to excise a limb.
You are consciously an animal,
caught; cutting–hand, foot,
arm–seems the only cut loose.
You gnaw, increasingly
panicked, you saw,
increasingly frantic, not
for freedom but survival,
for you know,
even as you slice, that it’s
your heart that’s trapped,
your heart that is beating you
so hard, so insistently. 

And here’s the triolet:

After Lashing Out 

Then comes a time when you’d cut off a limb–
when you’re an animal, entrapped and sore,
when, in the come of time, you’d cut off a limb,
if you believed your severed paw could trim
the clock hand’s spring; if you believed a whim
of excision could take you back before
that time, when what you became cut off a limb–
you were an animal, entrapped and sore.


(As always, all rights reserved.  And as always please please please check out my books Comic novel,NOSE DIVE,  book of poetry, GOING ON SOMEWHERE, or children’s counting book 1 MISSISSIPPI. )

Fish For Friday Flash 55 – “Used to Be” (The Secret Life of You Know What–)

March 9, 2012

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Used To Be

Fridays were permeated
by the smell of fish; fuzzy brown
limp sticks exuding stink
through the school in vengeance for
their not-so-sea
change, an odiferous insistence
that they had once been something actually
found in the natural world, subject
to the laws of birth, death, decay.  We
could only eat them
with ketchup.

As always, all rights reserved.  And, as always, have a great Friday.  And, since it’s Friday, tell it to the G-Man!

And finally, finally, if you are looking for some light-hearted escape over the week-end, check out NOSE DIVE, my comic novel about noses, New York, friendship, and fallen goudas.   Told too with a dab of fone sex. (But very innocently.)

PS – and I should really have made it 55 flavors instead of 57, but couldn’t do that to an old icon.

Triolets (Waltzing Not-Mathilda)

March 8, 2012

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Here are two triolets!  A triolet is a medieval form that is the subject of a wonderful article by Samuel Peralta and Gay Reiser Cannon for dVerse Poets Pub Form For All.  It is a form involving repeating lines.  (I think of it as a short waltz of a villanelle, but I’m not sure where the 1-2-3 comes from except that the first line is repeated three times.)

Below are my two draft attempts;  they use some of the same lines.  I personally think the second is better (though maybe I can work them into a pair.)

Starting to Unwind (Beginning Yoga)

I found that I’d not breathed for many years
and that my heart was lodged in my right-hand back.

I’d recycled air from way back when and fears
I found that I’d not breathed for many years

to anyone–not sympathetic ears,
nor those stopped up against a hurting fact

I’d found.  I had not breathed for many years;
my heart was lodged in my right-hand back.


Who knows?

I found that I’d not breathed since who knows when–
a cherry blossom spring, I wore white gloves
whose seams ran up my hand,  then back again.

I found that I’d not breathed since–  Who knows when
the heart bursts seams when it finds a pen
to hold it, when it leashes its wild loves?    

I found that I’d not breathed since who knows when,
a cherry blossom spring–I wore white gloves. 

All rights reserved. 

A de Chirical Poem? -Tuning (As It Were) The Quivering Lyre

March 7, 2012
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Here’s a rather silly poem posted after reading a lot of good online poetry.

Tuning The Quivering Lyre

What I want is to write something lyrical,
with language that’s tonally spherical,
with similes deep and de Chirical–
what I want is to write something lyrical.

But instead I end up with prosaic–
a verse like a sulphuric egg–
with word usage much like the Hague–
(the Conventions–oh oh so prosaic.)

Which is why I am hoping this time
to at least find some music in rhyme–
the repeating of vowels the same kind
at the end of each hoppity line–

Sure, some may insist it’s no poem,
if it does not recall a Zen Koan,
or love story picked to the bone
(the meeting, the parting, the moan.)

But me, I still find that I write it–
caring not that its words are benighted,
chock full of old sentiments tritish
and rhymes that are really not quitish–

Hope you don’t mind.

Looking For Blue Sky In Gray (Sonnet)

March 6, 2012

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No chance 

I wanted to give her time, a summer’s day,
a perfect green blue day that I would pluck
from my summers to come, that I would lay
upon her bed, and, shimmering, tuck
around her.  It should have been an easy offer,
easy to say.  After all, the future
can’t be readily assigned; life’s coffer
holds nothing forfeit.  Tubes followed suture
to a darkness barely gowned; I searched around
my jangling brain for words, but what came out
were stones that lined her pillow, the sound
not meaning my meaning, and not about
summer days; my own fierce will to live
hoarding what there was no chance to give.  

I am posting the above poem (a rewritten version of older sonnet) for dVerse Poets Pub Open Link Night.   Check dVerse out for great poetry.

Also, if you have time–and I’m sorry for the abrupt change to comedy here–check out my book of poems  GOING ON SOMEWHERE,, for the original of this poem.  (Pearl likes it!)

Mag 107–I Want! (The perfect Chapeau)

March 4, 2012

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Below if my rather silly offering for Magpie Tales 107, hosted by Tess Kincaid.   My picture is based on a really great photo by Seralta Ban.

I Want!

She has always adored
a Fedora–rakish on a man,
foxy on a woman–the perfect
chapeau for one
and all, but especially, she thinks,
for her, because,
with such a large head, she
really needs
a man’s size hat.

And now–smack
under her nose!
Will he, she wonders,
take credit?

Have a great Sunday!  And, if you have time, check out, please, my books!  Comic novel,NOSE DIVE,  book of poetry, GOING ON SOMEWHERE, or children’s counting book 1 MISSISSIPPI. )

“The Other Shore, From Various Angles”

March 3, 2012

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The lovely picture above is a digital artwork/photo by Walter W. Smith, and part of dVerse Poets Pub Poetics prompt, hosted by Sheila Moore today.  It was the inspiration for my draft poem below.

The Other Shore, From Various Angles 

When my first dog died,
by freak accident,
I didn’t know how to reach her.
I sent letters finally
through the “D” volume of
my Junior Britannica, as if its bright red
spine bound a path to
another shore, as if my dog
could read there.  

Sometime later, when
my grandma died, after
a fall and a day’s hard suffering,
I found her in dreams.  She would sit
before me in the eyelid of a school bus where
I’d see again the kindness of
her profile, soft chin
sloping to unjudgmental neck. I would
be desperate to speak to her, but  
would avert face, tears, certain they
were markers that this was not, in fact,
her bus, and would banish her
once more. 

The ashes of her daughter, Val–at least
a portion–we started sifting

into the sea by palmfuls.
The ash of bone 

is so much heavier than the ash of tree
that one expects it to sink instantly.  But
these did not sink, floating instead, as
a second briny foam,
till I, now adult, now mother,
felt pushed to step out far, to throw

out hard, the thick flesh of my thighs prickling with
deep salt cold, so that the powdered grey scud
could not wash back, but would be carried
out to sea and sparkling surface.
I don’t know why
this seemed so important–
except that hers was a life that had grown painful
at the end, painful
for a very long time, and already she
had been marked by hurt brain, hurt
body, someone who had never truly known
her own sufficiency–and I somehow did not want
those ashes straggling back to this,
our landlocked shore, to be stepped upon or
through, caught idly, 
cast back.   

(All rights reserved.   The below is an old watercolor of mine, which actually depicts my grandmother on that dream bus.)

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“Ganglion” – “Life’s Too Short To Enjoy It”

March 2, 2012

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The below is my ‘Spoken Word’ effort for a “meeting the bar” challenge of dVerse Poets Pub, hosted by Ami Mattison and Claudia Schoenfeld.  (Check out their great article.)  I’m afraid my attempt is not taped and a bit long. (I feel like Madame de Sevigne–if I had more time, it would have been shorter.  Also, perhaps, if I had more discipline.)  But here it is:

Ganglion

So, you know what a ganglion cyst is?
In my case,
a cyst on the wrist,
born from what I dangled–
in my case, groceries.
In New York City,
you carry groceries.
A hard little lump
that I could wiggle, though it
hurt to press, and in my mind
was humped at first
just like the big bad C,
which was simply not allowed
a single mom in NYC (where
you have an absolute responsibility
to ward off all disease till
your kids can walk
to school without
held hands.)
But I looked it up
and found it just a cyst,
born from carrying
too damn much, in my case,
groceries.

The true ganglion
is a tissue made of nerve cells,
no relation to the cyst–a
weemy kind of tissue they depict
as pink, with dotted ovals–but when I think
of my ganglion, my cyst, I think
of seven plastic bags
one winter’s evening—I always liked that store
even if too far–everything
so shiny on the shelf, the greens bouquets, tomatoes they
hosed down, oat biscuits baked
by the Prince of Wales–
seven bags a record, but
as plastic bands dug into
my cysted wrist, I felt kind of
ridiculous, till at
about West 4th, where I stopped once more
to shift from side to side
in the broad lit drive of a parking garage,
and one guy shouted
‘Hey Joe, com’on already, life’s too short
to enjoy it.”

Listening to the jingle of keys above
a Jersey accent thick
as double-knit, I went all smug inside,
thinking, life’s
too short to enjoy it?

And how they’d
got that wrong, right?

Right.
But did I mention
there was slush upon the street,
the sidewalks too, the gutters clogged,
big pools at every corner?
I trudged in wide
detouring curves as night nestled down,
seeing, but not able to really take in,
a violet sky, the crimson fade of stoplights
down to Canal, the cold damp air
that refused exhaust but not
exhaustion.

Did I mention the thickening fervor of Friday night
that also crowded that dark sidewalk?
The clack of others’ black heels, their slicked-
back hair?  At one curbside, we always stopped–
me and my kids–to find the transcendent
blue of a high floor aquarium, everlastingly amazed
by the square miracle
of turquoise water in brick sky,
but I did not look up,
for the bags were heavy, and the kids not
with me–they’d be gone too when I
got home, Friday nights their night
away, and all this food, I realized,
would need to be put away, kept
cold, eaten some other day,
some other life, and so,
above the cutting edges
at my wrists, I counted
to make steps happen,
one, two, three, four,
one,two,three,
thinking that if I could just count
out the rest of that
long way, I might not
feel a thing.

(Have a great weekend!  Thanks so much for reading!  Check out, please, my books!  Comic novel,NOSE DIVE,  book of poetry, GOING ON SOMEWHERE, or children’s counting book 1 MISSISSIPPI. )