Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Small Town


My childhood self
still walks the streets of the village
where I loved to visit
a grandmother, dead long ago.
Her aged friends
are still vivid in my mind.
One had a parrot that nipped my nose
and a goldfish pond
where the brilliant fish
eluded my childish grasp.
Another came to tea
and was given elderberry wine
because “the doctor ordered it.”
A glowering distant cousin 
with a crippled foot who came to visit
preferred to sleep on a feather bed,
so in the heat of summer
I dragged the dusty thing from the attic,
grumbling and resentful of that gloomy relative.
A box of demi-tasse cups
was given me by one of those women.
“Don’t wait too long to marry,”
was her advice.  -- ”I did.”
I sensed the sorrow of her life.

Unmarried women of uncertain age
seemed prevalent.
Why did they never wed?
Did the young men leave
for livelier towns?
Or did their beaux
go off to war and die?
Their locked trunks in the attic
were seldom opened,
holding treasures (I supposed)
for which they had no room
in the straitened circumstances
to which they had come.

Now aging as well,
I return to find
old houses remain,
still beautiful and cared for,
and the county courthouse
with the Civil War cannonball
still lodged in its pillar
looks solid and unchanged.
But busy stores
that then sold thread
and shoes and ice cream
now stand empty and forlorn,
and the ghosts of my childhood friends
walk the silent streets.

© Peggy Latham, 2012

County Courthouse; photo by Tony Russell

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Ancient Conversations


The river of our tongues has dried to cracked earth.  
Too long since wear, crawfish pronunciations,
and bullfrog syllables are shells and lumps of sand now.
Ē kapuna, make wai ‘ia au.
I am thirsty for the metaphors of our grandmothers,
their every breath a prayer for peace and unchecked giving,
and receiving was as easy as a nap with a pole in my hand on a warm day.
I crave the torrents from times when women were gardens
and there was only one table to put a vase on.
Yet in place of flowers, homework, and electronic debris,
bountiful food prepared with god in mind was served
to strangers passing through the channel.
© Sarah Bordeau-Rigterink, 2012

Hawaiians eating poi, c. 1896
Photo by Strohmeyer & Wyman
From Wikimedia Commons/Library of Congress

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Give Me Something to Write


Give me something to write.
Inside me I hold a book,
Filled with page, after page, after never-ending page of hungry space.
My pages long for tales of the countless hours we’ve spent running through the night,
Of the oceans of color we’ve consumed painting the world with our souls.

There are words
That dripped from your lip like dew drops on a desert flower.
My pages thirst for them,
Were made for them,
Want  them to come home.
Send them home.
Your very walk inspires metaphors,
Metaphors with the power to make rational thought question its own existence.
Send your words and your metaphors home.
My pages will cradle them – like the moonlight,
Show them the freedom they were born to possess.

Run with me.

Let’s find our way out of this strange skin we wear,
So that we can unhide our holy.
Release the ember inside us that wants to burn like a bonfire unbridled.
This holy bonfire that burns truer than anything else that has ever burned,
This, too, would I write on my pages,
If you would let me.

My pages want only to remember:
Stories of us;
And of how we got here;
Stories of how we bent ruthlessly the rigid lines of this world’s senseless sheet music.

On those nights we ran, the paint still wet under our fingernails,
We pursued an irony we had only heard existed,
Tried to outrun a past we were destined to miss like a lost limb,
Our steps, accidental brush strokes on an ever-shifting canvas.

My pages want to remember the days,
The days when we knew what we wanted
Yet didn’t know what we knew.
We recognized beauty in all its forms.
And simplicity came naturally.
They were yours, and mine, and ours.
Send them home.

Inside me I hold a book.
So give me something to write.

© Axel Cooper, 2012

Artist Painting at Central Park
Photo by SpyON from Wikimedia Commons