Category Archives: poetry

the day mrs. nixon asked for my elephant pin, a poem

illustration Pat-Nixon-9424065-1-402

The Day Mrs. Nixon Asked for My Elephant Pin

Though my star-struck grandmother urged,

I wouldn’t give it up.  Well, what did the President’s wife

expect?  She, mother of two, should have known better

than to ask such a thing.  Granted, I was tall

 

for a five-year-old; perhaps she thought I was six or seven

and capable of giving — the just-bought plastic trinket

was fastened tight over my heart, shiny red,

two imbedded rhinestone eyes, the elephant’s mouth

 

and trunk drawn back in a premature but apt leer

of triumph.  Everybody knew the President

had the nomination.  Hustled along the receiving line,

elaborately outfitted in my pale yellow spring coat and hat

 

from Sak’s, I reached for Mrs. Nixon’s offered hand,

scared silly when she didn’t let go.  All around stood

blank-faced men with crew-cuts.  “That’s such a pretty pin.

May I have it?”  She leaned in close and I could smell her

 

breath, sweet dried apricots, her hair-spray, each fragile

lock shellacked into a precise curl.  Mrs. Nixon’s face

was gaunt, her sad eyes sunk deep within her cheeks,

but her toothy smile was kind, her voice gentle.

 

My squirmy hand lay trapped within hers — her grip cool,

dry, firm, not the sort of woman who easily takes “no”

for an answer.  I couldn’t speak a word, just stared

at my feet and shook my head, ashamed.  At eighteen,

 

when I registered to vote for the first time,

I wrote in “Democrat” — the perfect coda.  Years later,

looking for a place to rent, my husband and I

toured the Nixons’ condo development in the remote wastes

 

of northwest New Jersey, and I saw my ancient nemesis

getting onto the elevator; wincing a little in sorrow

at her fixed, glassy expression, wondering if she still

remembered me, or even that breezy day in Miami.

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I Love You, Joe Temeczko, a poem

illustration i love you joe temeczko liberty world trade

MINN. MAN LEAVES N.Y.C. NEARLY 1M
BY SCOTT SHIFREL / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2001, 12:00 AM

Joe Tomeczko was a little old man who often carried around a paper bag, took buses everywhere and tried to earn a few bucks by doing odd jobs for neighbors and friends. But another side of the 86-year-old Polish immigrant was discovered after he died in Minneapolis on Oct. 14 and left nearly $1 million to the City of New York. “He wanted to somehow honor the victims of the World Trade Center disaster,” said his attorney, William Wangensteen, who helped Tomeczko change his will after Sept. 11. “He felt a real kinship for the whole city and was very saddened by what happened,”

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/minn-man-leaves-n-y-1m-article-1.926202#ixzz2Vxy7hEYV

 

I Love You, Joe Temeczko

I am sorry you died with your heart broken,

but you were on the way to mending it in your

usual fashion, doggedly, with persistence,

never giving up, no matter how hard and dry

 

the bones they gave you to gnaw on,

your only nourishment.  I love you for that,

and for your dapper air, your ascots,

the beautiful women in your embrace,

 

before you lost it all, and came to America.

The war drove you from your Polish home,

to this shore, under the gaze of that beautiful,

but blank-eyed lady, the statue in the poster

 

next to your bed, where you slept with dreams,

and nightmares, even children can comprehend.

You felt this country’s warm embrace, you said,

and so made yourself at home here, a peddler

 

at heart, selling, selling useful things to everyone

you met.  A chandelier to your lawyer, soap to your

grocer, tools and services to neighbors.  But your greatest

service you gave away for free.  “I learned a lot about

 

persistence from him,” says the man next door, the one

you trusted to handle what was done with your small,

strong body and your possessions after you died.  Joe,

my friend, my teacher, generous and demanding, no one

 

you touched or didn’t touch is unmoved by your spirit.

You expected the best from people, and in the end

that’s exactly what you received.  Yes, once again

you’ve beat me up the stairs, but I am following

 

close behind.  My dear, dead darling,

accept this small kiss from these unworthy lips of mine,

gently, and wherever you are, or aren’t, know

how much I love you, and always will.

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SUMMER EVENING, BEAUMONT, a poem

illustration summer evening beaumont wash post logo

“Ugly catcalls have taken their toll on Bill Simpson and John DecQuir. After just six months,Vidor‘s only remaining black residents are packing their bags, frightened by too many instances of harassment.

“There are good people here, don’t get me wrong,” said Simpson, who moved from nearbyBeaumont. “But it’s overshadowed by the negativity, the hostility, the bigotry of this town.”

A federal judge last year ordered the eastern Texas town, home to 11,000 whites, to desegregate its 70-unit public housing complex. A few blacks moved in last February — the town’s first black residents in at least 70 years. When they walked through town, they were hailed with racist …”

Summer Evening, Beaumont

I was not there. I am only an observer.
The four-year old on his tricycle is
dressed for the heat in loose shorts
and nothing else. His hair appears

disarrayed as he stares at the ground.
The back of his bare skull is as finely
carved as a newborn’s, the delicate
shadows of his shoulder bones ask for

touch. The clumsy chalk lines on the
pavement are from a murder and he
knows it — the blood came out last
night as the torpid sun was going down.

This boy has to make stories up in
his head, but the shy universe he
creates is a notion he’ll never share.
I was not there. I am only an observer.

The dead man was 300 pounds and didn’t
talk much, as he, too, was waiting for a
miracle. Gang members used five or six
bullets, then ran away without taking his

wallet, the item they wanted most of all.
I was not there. I am only an observer.
Hours earlier, the victim had left his
rented home in all-white Vidor; he told

how the folks there threatened to hang him,
he told how lonely it was to wake up every
day and remember where he was. He wasn’t
afraid, he said, just tired of fighting.

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the getaway plan, a poem

img163

The Getaway Plan (Late Fall, 2001)

I am on the phone
with my neighbor
who has the most delicate
blue eyes in all the world
jeweled inside tissue-thin lids
listening to her evacuation plan

my own words
fail me
my chest is tight
my ribcage bound with steel
bands of dread

three days’ worth of food
she tells me
and don’t forget your
important papers

while I’m trying to decide
what the word important
means anymore
my three-year-old cries
for gummi bears

she’s had too much
candy already this night
because when she kneels
and cries, begging for more
I can’t say no

what terrifies me most
is a vision of her
as she might end up, should the world
melt around us
and leave us where mothers and babies
get ground into dust

a place with no pity
where her eyes stop shining
with tears for candy
a place where her eyes
stop shining altogether

my 78-year-old neighbor
a beautiful woman
with glowing silver hair
that caresses her neck
like my grandmother’s once did
tells me exactly what I should pack
so we can leave immediately
just in case they blow up
the three nuclear reactors
in our state
the closest just 70 miles away

she’s got maps of the wind currents
so we’ll know which road to take

she says Florida will never
be habitable again
and I think of the gopher tortoise
who lives out near the barn
how when I mow the field
I so carefully avoid its burrow
because it’s endangered

I see it crossing the dirt road
every couple of days
our eyes always meet but
I’m sure it won’t remember me
after I’m gone

and all the while she talks
I am trying to breathe
and act as though
I am going to keep my children
safe from harm

but there’s something wrong
with my chest
it’s those steel bands

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in defense of lawyers, a prose poem

illustration defense of lawyers quote anton-chekhov

quote:  anton chekhov

 

In Defense of Lawyers

Inevitably, a person’s defense of an idea becomes most impassioned just before they cease to believe in it altogether. Passion comes to open the way for the loss of innocence: the world we once loved is lost. What does this say about the plight of lawyers? They shoulder the breach of your dreams for simple cash and nothing more. Everybody sympathizes with garbage men: well, somebody’s got to do it. Lawyers handle the garbage of the soul.

I myself had clients I believed in — false teeth and all, I took them to my heart; well, somebody’s got to do it. I wasn’t unusual in this regard; it’s a phase all of us go through. Granted, most people don’t understand our system of laws. We’re born into this web of relationships, whether we like it or not. No way to opt out, though I always kept one eye open in hopes of that promised loophole, wanting to wriggle away from society’s tight grip like a stray dog out of a stiff new collar. Nobody, not even a liar, wants to live in a cage; we all went to law school to figure out how to open the cage doors. What we found is that there is no way out, not ever. For all of us, the only sure finish is bankruptcy, or death.

Yet, there came the day I wanted only to crawl under my desk and stay there. My client had informed me he would lie to the judge. All the rules about keeping quiet were no comfort. I could no more allow him to lie than I could rip out my own intestines. I wept, in the ladies’ room, wanting to die of a broken heart and have it over that way. My client lost, no fault of mine. I’m sorry, I told him. He spit in my face, coming close, pointing his weathered index finger like a weapon. You being sorry doesn’t help me, he yelled. I feared he would strike me. That day was my last hearing ever. Everyone blames their lawyer for what happens later — no one talks about the price lawyers have paid, in dreams.

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while jenny laughs, a poem

illustration while jenny laughs hawks illustration while jenny laughs nursing mother

While Jenny Laughs
(originally published in Earth’s Daughters)

 
While Jenny laughs,
two large brown hawks
ride the currents,
swirling over our heads
like the occasional
dreams we’ve had

of flying — she and I
agree on this. She
raises her blouse
to nurse her son.
His wispy curls are moving
lazily in the air, too,

his tender scalp
the color of a ripe peach,
and as he nurses she
kisses his hand.
Since I cut my hair
short, she says,

people keep mistaking me
for a man. Her smooth
face is perfectly
symmetrical, her cheekbones
high pirouettes of pale
skin, lightly flushed and

freckled by the quick
heat of early summer.
I would never, ever,
mistake you for a man,
I say, and as her milk
flows into the baby’s

mouth she laughs again,
her high voice turning
into notes of clear amber
bells. Look at the hawks
one more time, I tell her,
and so, to please me, she does.

 

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where does it begin?, a poem

illustration where does it begin mossy backed florida cooters illustration where does it begin hands on shoulders

Where Does It Begin?
(originally published in The Charlotte Poetry Review)

Possibly with well-steeped tea,
gooseberry jam on raisin bread,
lots and lots of idle chatter;
later, he could try daily walks

through the woods — though she
has resolved she is finished with
nature — still he persists
in pointing out the log in the creek

holding five mossy-backed turtles;
if all else fails he could try
brushing her hair in the rough manner
of a mother, offhand, impatient fussing

to decipher knots. He could place her
in a room filled with the images
of budding spring trees, on a wide,
comfortable sofa, her stockinged feet

perched lightly upon the armrest
as she reads. The sight
of the frail new leaves will work
upon her, surely? Better yet,

he could fill a bowl with fruit,
three kinds of berries,
layering green upon yellow
upon blue upon red, teasing her

with a few squares of chocolate,
protesting all the while
that he always says the opposite
of what he means. Who lived my life

until this day? she will say. I could
ask myself the same question, he will
say by way of answer, placing his hands
lightly, lightly upon her shoulders.

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two summers after the divorce, a poem

illustration merry-go-round illustration playground climber_superdome
Two Summers After the Divorce
(originally published in Snakeskin)

I. Children

The greenness, and the cars whizzing faintly by
like Central Park. Drops of water plopping
from the trees above me, cooling.
Children squeaking on the swings.
Soothing noises. A ginger-haired dog
with beautiful green eyes. A ginger-haired little girl
with yellow socks. In a blue flowered dress,
she runs past, smiling. My ex-husband
already has a new baby.

II. Privacy

My daughter’s bangs fall into her eyes,
so I ask if she wants a trim. No, she says,
her hair over her eyes gives her privacy
and makes her feel like she’s never alone.
I exchange glances with a blonde curly-headed toddler
in a black stroller with leopard print cushions,
sucking on a pacifier. She blinks knowingly.
She’s seen her own future, but will forget it
by the time she can talk. She sees colors around
people’s heads, her eyes glaze over at the beauty.

III. Expectations

Berry juice drips on my paper — a hazard of writing
outside under trees, birds and squirrels.
A granny says to her grandson,
“That’s a big spider you’re climbing on.
See his eyeballs?” They argue about letting him have his toy cars —
she wants him to climb and run and swing.
Granny has a long red braid on one side,
fading to gray at the scalp. Did she quit dyeing it abruptly
six months ago? Just gave it up, it looks like.
She’s learned exactly what you can expect from men.

IV. Desires

A young man passing is shirtless, jeans and hair wet
from riding around on his bicycle in the gentle rain.
Barefoot. Almost a man, but not there yet. He looks
furtively at women’s bodies, wanting something
but not knowing what it is. I don’t know any more, myself.
The girls on the merry-go-round scream, “Faster, faster!”
Heads tilted full back, faces to the sky, yelling.
My baby says, “This is the twisty-turny insane asylum.”
She calls to me and waves. I wave back, nod and smile.

V. Hope

A black teenager dressed in shorts and a muscle shirt,
with his baggy football jersey tucked into the waist,
draped over his thighs like an apron.
He is lean and muscular, hanging out with two fat boys.
I wonder how many times he will attempt marriage.

VI. Rational Thinking

The sky is multiple shades of grey, the breeze puffy
in medium bursts. Some little girls climb on the spider-gym
and mine says, “We’re mites. And we sit on his eyeballs.”
Redheaded lady in blue jeans and a red gingham blouse,
white wrist brace with day-glo pink straps.
The ex-husband calling me a harlot is like blaming
the broken capillaries for the bruise.

VII. The Upper Middle Classes

One impeccably dressed woman who looks just like
his new wife walks by, with two-carat stud earrings
and three small children but at least four babysitters
at all times. I’ve seen her around town for years.
She’s always pregnant or nursing.
Her feet in black sandals with bright red toenails,
professionally painted, her gray tweed suit with trousers
and her dime-store fuzzy hair-tie.

VIII. Beauty

I can smell the fragrant candy-striped amaryllis
out in the grassy circle from 20 feet away.
Fog in the hills and over the river,
branching off, banks lined with thick green trees.
Hills of crumbling shale, flowers by the road, pink,
purple, white. Plaster bunnies and fawns on lawns.
Lavender stained glass windows in the church.
Queen Anne’s lace, orange-red daylilies.
Grasshoppers flinging themselves at me,
banana spiders wait in their enormous webs.

IX. Truth

I run through the park, getting scraped by tree branches
but laughing as I run. The smell of cut grass and weeds.
Huge, opalescent night crawlers burying themselves
in leaf mulch. Character is not made in a crisis,
dear ex-husband: it is revealed.

 

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twelve songs for a broken ankle, a poem

illustration twelve songs for a broken ankle x ray pinsillustration twelve songs for a broken-ankle-cast

Twelve Songs for a Broken Ankle
(originally published in Eclectica)

One

Before she even notices my leg’s
in a cast, my daughter’s friend
Eleanor, age five and a half,
stares at me and says solemnly,
your voice sounds different.
Different how? Does it sound better
or worse? I ask her, laughing.
It sounds darker, she answers with a frown,
and suddenly it’s not so funny anymore.

Two

I remember hurting myself
trying to fly. Jumping down
out of trees; sometimes my ankles
would ache for days afterward.
We ate fudgsicles up in the trees
all that summer. We liked to spy
down on the older kids, kissing
and kissing and kissing below us.
I would caress the rough bark
under my fingers and hold on tight,
never afraid of falling, only forgetting.

Three

In high school, I fell in love
with a boy on crutches. His ankle
needed a metal plate to keep it together.
Years later, after he became a priest,
he wrote, remember all those times you carried
my books up and down the staircase
for me? Did I ever say thank you?

Four

In the emergency room, Dr. Scarlett
tells me about his young daughter,
how his wife broke her ankle
just before she went into labor.
Now his beautiful daughter loves
to dance, she twirls and twirls
in her new frothy ballet skirts
in front of the triple mirrors
at the department store. I’m afraid
I don’t have any good news for you, he says,
shaking his head, patting my shoulder.

Five

All of a sudden, the laws of physics
I’ve always sneered at seem
terribly, terribly important.
Simple issues of mass, density,
velocity, and villainous gravity
loom unsolvable. As a baby, I walked
suddenly, at ten months. Lessons
I thought I’d mastered are now swept away,
each step is like that very first one.

Six

The nurse applies the fiberglass
wrap with firm, even motions.
She is made dense with fat,
and as she bends forward
to wrap my sore dangling limb,
I watch her enormous breasts
heave up and down. The heat
from the casts’ chemical hardening
feels like my leg will surely blister.
Be sure to keep your heel down, sweetie,
she murmurs, her breath brushing my ear
gently again and again and again.

Seven

When bone breaks, it bleeds. The blood
pools underneath the skin, turns
purple then green then yellow
as the liver labors to reclaim it
for the good of the body. The frayed edges
of the broken bone reach out
to one another like pale garden tendrils
reach toward the sun, and soft new cells
form, caressed in that delicate vacuum. I sit
and feel my leg healing, it is like praying.

Eight

We are skating when it happens. I have just remembered
years ago, the first boy who ever asked me to skate
with him. He was a friend’s handsome
older brother, we’d never exchanged a word
before. He knew how I was waiting for him
to come to me, he felt everything before I did.
My hands slipped against his, both our palms sweaty —
then on the turns, he pulled me close against him
so we could go even faster. We went faster than anyone.
He was a better skater than I, he wasn’t afraid.

Nine

First, I put on the skates. Orange wheels,
black laces. I tie them tight, then stand
and make a few tentative forays
with my feet. The gliding sensation,
the lack of friction and stability,
seems much scarier than it did
ten years ago, the last time
I had skates on. Who needs this? I think.
I’m too old now. Who needs
to break an ankle? I take off the skates,
pad around in my thick white socks.
For a while I just watch the other skaters,
some are little tiny kids no higher than my thigh
zipping around like they were born with wheels.
I watch my daughter and her friend
cling shakily to each other and scream
with delight. I put the skates back on.

Ten

It’s not just my ankle that breaks when I fall.
A little girl has fallen; she is afraid.
Let me show you how to lift yourself, I tell her.
I kneel, the world turns too rapidly, odd
thoughts fly past, time rushes over me
with a powerful thrill; the next moment
I know myself, I lie awkwardly
upon my twisted ankle,
which does not hurt exactly, but tells me,
in a strong, eloquent voice,
lie still, stare at the ceiling
for a little while. Forget everything but
this moment, your sudden brief flight.
Faces peer down, but I hardly see them.
When I saw you lying like that,
the girl says after a moment,
I thought you were dead.
She knows more than I.
A certain elaborate lacing, drawn and wound
tight around my heart to keep it
from expanding beyond a certain girth,
from expecting more than was practical,
from beating with too much tipsiness,
apparently gives way in that moment as well.

Eleven

The young manager is so kind, he unlaces my boot
and — oh, so carefully straightens my leg.
His fingers upon my skin as he regards me
with his dark, thickly lashed eyes
are as smooth and tender as a lover’s.
Can you move it? he asks. I try, tell him
a slight crunching sensation ensues,
but happily report there is no pain.
His handsome face falls nonetheless.
Perhaps he doesn’t get it. I, on the other hand,
feel unusually light, buoyant, unafraid.
I do not care who is sad; however unseemly,
I am glad I had a few moments in the air
before I came back down to earth.

Twelve

As moments go,
surely it’s worth repeating?
Though I didn’t know it at the time,
my life will never be the same.
The stolid laws of physics
will have their way with me,
weak as I am — bone mends stronger
for the break, while once-bound hearts
are never any better off
for being allowed out
of their wrappings; it’s too late —
old scar tissue and scary
skipped beats cloud and darken
the intricate red lace
of frantic working muscle,
obscuring and confusing the memory
of that one important moment, in free flight,
how life seemed so beautiful, so terrible,
so clear. And the darkness spreads
outward, outward from my voice.

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the sword is a weapon of love, a poem

illustration sword is a weapon of love illustration sword is a weapon of love globe hand

The Sword is a Weapon of Love

(originally published in Stark Raving Sanity)

 

Brutal insight into a relationship occurs when the beloved

vomits in the bed… what can be borne, is, what cannot, dies.

Onslaughts of clarity come in the small hours like chest pains.

Can love survive endless trips to buy food?

 

Control your feelings — tie your hands together behind your back,

don’t pick up that stone.  Family is a genetic firestorm, shelter

yourself in a den carved out of solid rock.  Money is what creates evil.

A man I know lies whenever he can, if it will save a buck.

When you cannot decipher the callings of your heart

and soul, listen to loud music.

 

My grandmother left me a pair of silver goblets, which I

refuse to polish… I drank out of them on my wedding day —

they turned black instantly.  Beware of men

with black hair and dark eyes.  Beware of men who covet

objects of beauty, including you.  Their first

priority on the list of acquisitions is marriage.

 

When you have two opposing desires, do nothing.

Do first the one, then the other, if possible.

Take both paths simultaneously, and lie to everyone.

 

Beware of men who accuse you of interrupting.

If you fast for a day, you will experience quick and forceful change in your life.

The sword is a weapon of love. To be cut is to love deeply.

I know a man who hanged himself. His wife cut him down with his own sword.

 

In the bathroom, use lots of soap, feel emotionally cleansed.

Watch the moon, record it daily, change the color of your hair often.

Let the vines grow over the top of your roof, they will

penetrate your attic and a small wilderness will evolve over your head.

 

Always have a globe nearby to help you feel small.

Whenever you are embarrassed, take all your clothes off.

This will help you to remember what is really important.

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