Showing posts with label new poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new poetry. Show all posts

Monday, October 26, 2015

Fishing with my Father, 1970


He’d have a Pall Mall hanging loosely from his lips,
his eyes squinted tight behind sunglasses.
That habit he had of moving his head to the left
to shake back the sun-bleached hair that fell
from a side-ways part. Old dark green
boat shoes on his feet, holding the bamboo pole.


1970, probably. I can remember how it felt
to be small and unknowing. This man
who was everything good and true,
bigger than the sun, wider than the water.
His instruction so tender and slow,
taking the worm, baiting my hook.


My father, squatting behind me,
his tanned hands placed over mine so tiny,
we cast the line into the quiet lake.
Promptly impatient, I needed his steady
slowness to keep me still until
we had a tug, a heavy signal from


underneath where it was always dark.
Then dad pulled hard and the bamboo bent.
Out of the water sprang a mid-sized fish.
Dad was smiling, so I smiled back, until
he removed the hook and threw the creature
in a big red plastic bucket behind.
My, even then, poetic soul was thrown.


Panicked by the death of anything living,
I remember begging and crying, “Throw him
back! He can’t breath!” And my father laughed.
That made me cry more because it broke
my heart. But he saved my fish.
Shaking his head at my silly indulgence.


That was the conflict that lasted a life.
My father intolerant of my different way of
being a human being--someone beyond his
self-imposed, limited scope that meant fatherhood.
Where did my poetic, vagabond soul come from?
I know your paintings and I  have your jazz albums.


As I age, my face is more yours.
My one-liner sarcasm comes from your habit
made mine. Sometimes I catch myself clenching
my jaw, holding it all in just like you. And as my
beauty and health start packing, I recognize your pride
pulsating through the pronounced veins I got from you.


Monday, October 5, 2015

Your Face Reminds Me

Your Face Reminds Me


Your face reminds me of lines I need to write.
Your lips speaking poetic words about this world
we visit when it’s just us two.
In the room where love came to find us long ago.
I was so far from anything relevant
and you were very bitter like strong coffee.
Late afternoons, the sun slanting in through the blinds--
stripes on the lined shelves of literature.
A place where all else falls away, unnecessary.
Pushing the papers and opened books aside,
sudden lust was a visitor we welcomed.
Pleasure had to be restrained there,
kept quiet as a shameful secret we shared.


What do I miss the most?
The urgency.
I miss the urgency.

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

The Day We Pulled the House Down



The Day We Pulled the House Down


Dad had purchased the lot next door
and the weak old house that sat on it.
Old neighbor Annie had lived there
and left her pieces of memory behind.
My sister and I combed the forgotten place and
found what we thought were treasures.
Two small green bottles with aged labels.
One for me and one for her.
Keepsakes of a day we’d remember
with vivid detail like a video loop
that repeats for an eternity in the mind.
We were all there, the family.
Dad, mom, all three siblings.
Dad and brother securing the thick rope
around the old house and then to the truck.
The truck’s grunting and pulling
until the house seemed to go up
in a puff of smoke, but it was dirt
and the house was falling,
folding in on itself like an unnatural bloom.
Five of us watched it die a loud
long unsettling human-like death.
It left us each shaken in some odd way.
We couldn’t know then that it was a metaphor
for what can happen to regular people
like us in the huge crap game called life.
We became a house of abandoned
rooms, cobwebs hanging in corners.
Someone took all the trinkets we left there.
Nothing was costly; just precious to us.
It didn’t even feel like home anymore.
Then the house that was home was pulled
by the thick rope that surrounded it.
The foundation crumbled in surrender
and the walls gave up the good fight.
It fell with the cry of a valiant, but tired soldier.
We all shed tears as we watched it happen.


Now, home is not a place we can go
by taking a particular road or certain turn.
But the house of the mind has countless rooms
full of lovely things to smile about.