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Archive for the ‘Imagery’ Category

 . 
[with poems from Heron Clan X]
 . 
Chimney Swifts at the Historic Carolina Coach Garage
 . 
Two now more arrive and flit into the swirl,
swelling hive mind they shift and shape
the wind, counter then clockwise whirl
above old brickwork’s beckoning gape
 . 
left standing here erect as testament,
our conservational intent to leave
some landmark urban respite, benevolent
perhaps, perhaps self-serving; we’ve
 . 
taken advantage of their propulsive drive,
pushed our chairs back from the table
in the court to lean & steal their lives
and freedom open mouthed, rapt, able
 . 
for these few moments until darkness falls
to rise with them, untethered, bold
venture to where the elemental almost calls
but too soon bedtime, now our supper’s cold.
 . 
 . 
[For decades this warehouse and shop in Raleigh, North Carolina was a hub of activity servicing Carolina Coach Company buses, in the 1940s the nation’s largest regional bus company.]
 . 
Bill Griffin
from Poems from the Heron Clan Ten, Katherine James Books, Chapel Hill NC. © 2023
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Mom can no longer hear their restless chitterings up the flue on summer evenings. When we sit on the front porch she doesn’t notice their atmospheric ellipsis, punctuating summer afternoons with their aerobatics. She can’t believe they’re calling constantly to each other and to us until I try to mimic that chatter and she laughs. What she most definitely can, though, is wish to see them diving into her chimney at dusk, especially when I tell her I’d seen one do just that last night.
 . 
Revered ornithologist Roger Tory Peterson described Chimney Swifts as little dark cigars with wings. Tapered on the head end and the tail end with sharply tapered wings jutting out mid-fuselage, fluttering so rapidly you’d swear those wingbeats were uncoordinated and asynchronous, well, yes they do look like airborne cigars. Although they often appear in field guide pages adjacent to those other famous aerial foragers, the Swallows, taxonomists place Swifts most closely related to Hummingbirds (based on wing structure). No hovering, though, for these Chimney Swifts – always forward, forward, forward with their loops and barrel rolls. Some species of Swift only alight to lay eggs, spending all the rest of their lives in the air.
 . 
Once you recognize a Chimney Swift’s fricative titter, you’ll realize they’ve accompanied you on hot afternoons and evenings all your life (assuming you live in the Eastern US). Although they winter in Peru, all summer long from the Great Plains to the Atlantic coast Chimney Swifts are widespread and common, probably more common today than they were pre-colonization, when they depended on hollow trees for breeding. These days they sometimes nest by the hundreds in abandoned chimneys, great clouds spiraling in at dusk, perhaps mistaken for bats. You can even buy chimney-like roosting boxes to attract them to your yard to eat the mosquitos.
 . 
After supper, I carry our chairs to the deck for a clean line of sight to the chimney. No smoke has risen from these three pots for decades. Mom and I watch. And watch. The birds circle and tantalize, gyre away, spiral out of earshot then back again so swiftly she misses their brief passage. Keep looking. Don’t blink. Two Swifts buzz the opening but then pull up in a high-G climb. Sky darkens. Dusk wants to coalesce around us, trundle us back indoors. Suddenly one little bird at full throttle blips straight down into the chimney. Then another. It’s become too dark to count the rest, but when we return to the couch beside the fireplace we hear the nestling together of a congenial company who’ll rest here with us until first light.
 . 
 . 
Doug Stuber, Ed Lyons, and Richard Smyth Ph.D. hatched the idea for Poems from the Heron Clan in Rochester, New York in 1998. After Doug returned in 2015 from a seven-year professorship in South Korea, the anthology has been published every year. Not only does Volume Ten encompass a wide geography – poets from five continents, poets from Turkey, Brazil, Dominican Republic, Montenegro, and a dozen other countries – it also embraces a lavish geography of style and theme. The editors explicitly state: “We aim to represent well-established poets and emerging writers, young and mature poets, and poets of color.”
 . 
And North Carolina. NC poets populate these pages abundantly. JS Absher, Glenn Cassidy, Earl Huband, Shelby Stephenson, Steve Cushman, Anna Dallara, the three founders themselves – if you live in the South and read poetry, you’ll recognize these voices accompanying you all summer, all seasons. I’m drawn to all of the Carolina poetry in this volume and tempted to sample each one in this post. Alas, perhaps you’ll just have to purchase a copy. Meanwhile, here are Priscilla Webster-Williams, Preston Martin, and Bradley Strahan from Heron Clan X.
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Morton Salt
 . 
Under a purple umbrella, a girl in a yellow raincoat
carries a box of salt, the cover art singing out
When It Rains It Pours. I studied the dark blue carton
that lived on the kitchen table, the Morton Salt Girl
smiling with each shake of the cylinder.
 . 
Morton, my father, toured with the big bands,
playing what he called Mickey Mouse Music,
tunes too tame for one who’d grown up crating
spicy Chicago jazz with Red Nichols and Jimmy Dorsey.
 . 
Morton met Jean, my mom-to-be, at the Nicollet,
where she was hostess of the grand dining room:
Grant Wood murals, double white linens,
real silver silverware, and a stage
for the musicians and the act.
 . 
Morton must have winked at Jean
from behind his golden trombone,
the vocalist crooning I’ll be seeing you
in all the old familiar places.
He must have whispered some kind of proposal
as they floated like movie stars across the dance floor.
 . 
When I was six, Mother shredded my Father’s photo,
set her stoic Midwestern jaw, and never spoke
of him again. She didn’t need to, his features etched
on my face like the grooves in one of his Bluebird records,
the same strawberry-blond hair appearing in my mirror.
 . 
Each day, I gazed at his name on that dark blue box
stamped with the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval,
and over time, Morton, my founding father,
became a pillar of salt.
 . 
Priscilla Webster-Williams
from Poems from the Heron Clan Ten, Katherine James Books, Chapel Hill NC. © 2023
originally published in The Narrative Possibilities of Coral, Main Street Rag Publishing, Charlotte NC. © 2017
 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Elegy, Gloria Died in Eden
 . 
She took the well-traveled road
two nights ago.
No more tractoring up the back hills
or brush cutting lower fields,
or using her Daddy’s walking stick
++++ down beside the creek –
or oiling the mower or
penciling in the Reds box score,
or sipping an evening sweet wine
on the porch
++++ as nightly geese call down,
close overhead, descending to the reservoir.
 . 
She noted in her diary the day the flew on south.
And who will shoot the coyotes now?
 . 
Preston Martin
from Poems from the Heron Clan Ten, Katherine James Books, Chapel Hill NC. © 2023
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Empty Places
 . 
In the end we are all archaeologists,
sifting through the ruins of existence
to find shards of pottery
inscribed in a strange tongue:
a letter from a friend left on a picnic table
a poem written on the back of a menu,
the sketch of a girl whose name you can‘t recall,
a yellowed photograph with stranger’s eyes.
 . 
We keep on struggling with left over pieces
from a childhood puzzle, trying to fill the gaps
left my smiling lips missing from a face,
tears frozen on eyeless cheeks,
fingers absent from an outstretched hand.
But somehow cannot fill the empty place
and the dark comes creeping in.
 . 
Bradley Strahan
from
Poems from the Heron Clan Ten, Katherine James Books, Chapel Hill NC. © 2023
originally published in Gargoyle
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
The editors of Poems from the Heron Clan invite you to buy a copy, explore their previous issues at their BLOG, and consider submitting three poems and a 50-word bio to:
katherinejamesbooks@gmail.com
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
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 . 
[with poems by John Brehm (and A. R. Ammons)]
 . 
Songbird
 . 
Even thou I have not seen it,
I know how it could be,
how when the skylark flees
from a falcon’s quick pursuit
 . 
it will turn sometimes and begin
to sing, as if to say, “Being
eaten by a falcon is the last thing
in the world I’m worried about.
 . 
You cannot catch me, Tra, la, la.
I’ve got breath enough to waste
on a song like this, which you
may as well enjoy before I vanish
 . 
into air.” And the raptor know
it’s true, knows that anyone
foolish enough to sing in such
a circumstance is quite beyond
 . 
ever being caught, and that for all
his hunger he’ll be given just
a song, tumbling through the air,
as the body he desires disappears.
 . 
John Brehm
from Sea of Faith, winner of The Brittingham Prize in Poetry, University of Wisconsin Press, © 2004
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
For the past two months I am an ant whose dead moth has been lofted by an unseen hand. Go this way, go that way, it’s got to be around here somewhere. Tornado, no power for three days, driveway blocked, hundreds of trees down in our neighbors’ yards and a dozen in ours. Check the roof with the adjuster, walk the property with the arborist, wake up and go to bed with chainsaws and cherry pickers. We’ve lived in this house for forty years and the oak, hickory, maple, tuliptrees where already mature when we moved in. We’ve been used to one deep green engulfing embrace all summer, every summer. Now everything has changed.
 . 
I took a “break” this month, as I’d promised them last winter, to serve as primary caregiver for my nonagenarian parents while they spent a fond bit of time at their beach house. The first thing I noticed when Linda pulled back into our driveway the evening I returned was . . . WEEDS! Holy cow, fallow earth so used to deep shade must have been preserving this seed cache forever! Pokeberry, pilewort, hawkweed, fleabane, despised mimosa, uncounted escaped purple basil a friend gave me three decades ago – they’re everywhere and BIG! The invasion is overwhelming. As if life weren’t overwhelming me already.
 . 
After supper I walked out front to check the progress of a volunteer pumpkin that has grown up into the azaleas. Maybe I shouldn’t have instructed Linda to water it twice a week. The black-eyed susans have finally completed their conquest of our borders. Plants – they do enjoy sunlight. I stop in the middle of the roadway and turn to look back at our property. Is this the first time in two months I’ve looked up? Above and behind and around our house – sky. Empty sky. How long before the remaining trees fill it? How long until I lose this dread feeling that nothing will ever be the same?
 . 
 . 
A number of years ago I read an anthology that I often return to: The Poetry of Impermanence, Mindfulness, and Joy, edited by John Brehm. When life is overwhelming and being in the moment is about to set my last few hairs on fire, I open to any page. There is no judgement here. No finger-wagging that I am not doing “enough.” There are no spiritual prescriptions or required agendas. I know as I read I’ll simply be sharing with a companion, another human being. It’s nice to be just one human among other humans, from Basho to Billy Collins and Saigyō to Shakespeare, friends all. I am an ant who feels no anxiety for his moth.
 . 
Then one day my issue of The Sun arrived I discovered these two by John Brehm himself:
 . 
Wanting Not Wanting
 . 
I wish I didn’t
want things
 . 
to be other
than they are
 . 
but wanting
to be some-
 . 
one who
doesn’t want
 . 
things to be
other than
 . 
they are is
just another
 . 
way of wanting
things to be
 . 
other than
they are —
 . 
and I don’t
want that.
 . 
 . 
On Turning Sixty-Four
 . 
The slowing down
is speeding up.
 . 
John Brehm
from The Sun. Chapel Hill NC, June, 2020
 . 
Oh my. Ohhhh my. I photocopied the page and kept it taped the wall beside my desk for months. Eventually I said to myself, “This John Brehm fellow has gotten into my head. I’d better get to know him better now that we’re friends.” I ordered Sea of Faith and was immediately floored (or exalted?) by the inscription: To the memory of A. R. Ammons ( 1926-2001). Oh my, here’s my other perennial poetry inspiration. So to come full circle I share with you another poem which I resemble intimately, this Ammons poem that appears in The Poetry of Impermanence.
 . 
Old Geezer
 . 
The quickest
way
to change
 . 
the
world is
to
 . 
like it
the
way it
 . 
is.
 . 
A. R. Ammons (1926-2001)
from The Poetry of Impermanence, Mindfulness, and Joy. Wisdom Publications, Somerville MA, © 2017
 . 
 .
 . 
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
The Blasted Tree
 . 
Of all of them along the path
that curved for twenty miles
through thickest forest, it was
the blasted tree I loved
best. Among thousands of firs
risen beyond the eye’s reach,
among colossal cedars
with their bark soft
as humid earth, among
groves of slender birches that
filtered winds cast across
these hills from Asia,
among even the hemlocks, gripped
in rocky ground and holding
two hundred years of darkness
in each leaf, among all these
it was the blasted oak
I loved best. Just as the path
turns and ascends, it stands
in a little clearing, like
a signpost to the walker
who would go on farther, as if
to say there is some price
to be paid, or only
the stricken may enter here.
Perhaps because it stood alone
the lightning bolt found its way
to it, the branch that would
have arched above and shaded
the meadow, torn off in a
brilliant flash of the sky’s
violence, ripped cleanly
from the trunk, though you can
still see the black scorched
teeth of the wood where
it broke and let
the limb fall to earth.
It must have been a ghastly
sound and a sight heart-
breaking to behold, the perfect
symmetry and elegance gone
in an instant. And now
a piece of sky no one would
ever have seen from here
come clearly into view,
empty and lue and cleaner
than before because of
the branch’s vivid absence.
I loved the damaged grandeur
of that tree, how it bore
its loss with such composure,
and kept on growing, lop-
sided, irreparable, beautiful,
the catastrophe of its history
written on its body.
And though I am not one
who’s been appointed to say
what trees may mean, it was
no mystery why it could hold
me so still, compel my eye
to such study, whenever
I passed that way.
 . 
John Brehm
from Sea of Faith, winner of The Brittingham Prize in Poetry, University of Wisconsin Press, © 2004
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Signs and Wonders
 . 
I’m not entirely in favor of summer,
what with its drop-dead heat,
its shallow unbothered
 . 
air of fullness beyond ending or
enduring. Sure I like to see
half the world disappear
 . 
behind this velvet green pulled from
the magician’s hat of the month
of May just like everybody
 . 
else. And I’m aware of the sun’s
unbearable importance because
why would we have ever
 . 
stood upright if not to get the sun
off our backs when we dropped
from the trees onto
 . 
the burning savannas five million
years ago? Now we can scan
the horizon, carry things
 . 
in our hands, give and take things to
and from one another. From
which all history
 . 
follows. Still, I wonder whether
swinging wordlessly from
branch to branch
 . 
might be better. I don‘t fell all
that thankful towards the
sun for bringing us
 . 
here or staging this big production,
this overwritten text in which
every meaning contains its
 . 
opposite – the furious tenacity
of life calling forth the sev-
ering response of death,
 . 
etc. Just last night I was walking
home thinking is my lover
going to leave me?
 . 
when a dead bird plummeted
from the sky, slammed onto
a car hood and rolled
 . 
onto the sidewalk beside me.
I’m as un-Homeric as the
next person, but Jesus,
 . 
I said, this cannot be a good
sign. Did it have a heart
attack mid-flight, Or
 . 
was it dropped from the talons
of a predator? Or knocked
out of the sky by an
 . 
airplane? Or thrown down by
the god assigned to watch
over and comment on
 . 
my various questions and pre-
dicaments? If we’d stayed
in the cool shade of
 . 
the forest no birds would ever
fall on us, or if they did we
wouldn’t kill ourselves
 . 
trying to decipher what they
might foretell. And this
morning coming up
 . 
the 34th Street subway I passed
a young Russian man hand-
ing out pamphlets, saying,
 . 
“Jesus is alive. Jesus loffs you.”
I don’t think so but I don’t
know anything, only
 . 
that it’s hot and we don’t belong
here and our hands betray us
and you’re gone.
 . 
John Brehm
from Sea of Faith, winner of The Brittingham Prize in Poetry, University of Wisconsin Press, © 2004
 . 
 .
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
You
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If you would like to buy a book mentioned in these pages:
– – – visit your local independent book store – or –
– – – click the publishers’ links I try to include each week – or –
– – – purchase online at Bookshop.org, where a portion of each sale is returned to independent booksellers. Thanks!

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[with 3 poems by Michael Hettich]
 . 
Core
 . 
The hawk in the white pine shivers, hunched
into itself like a state of being
 . 
we might think had vanished
if we’ve been playing
too long with our gadgets, or making arrangements
to assure our perfect happiness
 . 
sometime in the future. The wind that tossed
cut-down trees
remains a ghost
inside our furniture, like the antique
notion of a soul, and ancient tides
 . 
drew the swirls in the stones that line
our paths. Scars that mark the seasons
 . 
our ancestors lived,
etched like tree rings
into the secrets we don’t even know
we’re keeping; a dream that woke us to forget,
 . 
a blue that dazzles the sky as only
nothing can do, in the morning.
 . 
Michael Hettich
from The Halo of Bees
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Mom has been put to bed, the nurse’s aide has left, and Dad leans hunched in his favorite blue recliner. As he reads each line of his novel, Dad turns his head left to right, back and forth like a cartoon character eating corn-on-the-cob emptying each successive line of kernels, or precisely the opposite, like a typewriter platen that only returns to its starting point when the line has filled itself. Three lines. Five lines. Now Dad’s eyelids droop, his book droops, and just beyond the pocked and cratered moon of his head the windows of the house across the street catch fire with the dying sun. The orange and smoke of the end of day.
 . 
In a few moments Dad will jerk a bit, open his eyes, and read a few more lines. Some additional span of moments beyond that he will put down the book, heave himself from the chair with a grunt, stagger and catch himself on the wall on the way down the hall to bed. Irrelevant. This moment is the luminous, the sun’s reflection filling the neighbor’s windows before they eclipse and darken. This is the fulcrum moment upon which all prior moments and all moments to come must teeter and balance. Perhaps the three of us present in this old house feel its presence as we breathe in and breathe out, the very quiet house hanging by its fingernails to its own particular very quiet light in this dark whirling night-welcoming time-swallowing universe.
 . 
As I continue to watch, Dad turns his head, a fraction of an arc just barely perceptible, left to right.
 . 
 . 
Core – the first poem in the first section of this new collection by Michael Hettich – is indeed the core and carries me there with it. A state of being. The secret interior liveliness of things, of all things. The ghosts that connect every one of us if we believe their essence.
 . 
I can’t turn the page. I have to return to the first line and begin again. Moments coalesce. I reread images and stanzas in different orders. It is a poem of being and a poem of becoming. I am filled with this one poem and overcome with the awareness of secrets residing in the most mundane things that surround me.
 . 
My son-in-law Josh has constructed a hive, a Ritz Carlton of a hive in my view, and he awaits a swarm. He teaches me about the living organism which is a family of bees. When they sense some ethereal signal, perhaps overcrowding or overly plentiful surroundings, the workers begin the special feeding of a newly hatched larva who will grow into a new queen. The hive cannot have two queens. When the new matures, the old queen takes half the workers and leaves to swarm. If Josh is particularly blessed, if the offerings of beeswax and lemongrass with which he has anointed his hive box are acceptable, the swarm will take up residence and begin making new bees. And new honey.
 . 
The thirty “new” poems in this “new and selected” are themselves such a living organism. They move together through darkness to bring flickering glimpses of light as in dreams. They know there is a core and they seek it. They find wildness in everything and they celebrate it. They are “a sudden glimpse into the silence between thoughts.” All the while the writer, and we readers, too, if we follow, questions the person he was and the person he might become. And in the process of all this seeking and discovery, perhaps each of us may encounter the person we are.
 . 
The Halo of Bees, New & Selected Poems 1990-2022, Michael Hettich. Press 53, Winston-Salem NC, © 2023
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Another Kind of Silence
 . 
Sometimes the world grows louder, you realize,
just as the day falls still
and insects whose names you’ll never know
start screaming and laughing, scraping their wings,
then falling silent. It’s as though there were some
 . 
technology that could capture your dreams
and throw them on a screen, to show you to yourself
and confuse you more deeply, you who are not
alone but live in solitude, never
seeing anyone but yourself, even
 . 
when you are talking with your friends and family,
even when you’re moving through a crowd, thinking
 . 
Everything is wild at its core, even
half-asleep evenings in front of the TV,
even listless afternoons shopping
for knickknacks, or food. And food is especially
wild. Just think of all those apples and grains
of rice, just think of that wine
ripening as grapes in the bright sun of some
foreign country, the bees and even
 . 
the bats zig-zagging through the gloaming, singing
as they feast – another kind of silence:
 . 
music your ears are not built to hear,
like the roots of these trees, humming as they soak up
the puddles that have deepened for so many days
you hardly remember how the sunlight feels
on your body, how it makes you squint
and see things differently, the way it makes everything
 . 
waver and shimmer, like a mirage
you walk toward, never arriving.
 . 
Michael Hettich
from The Halo of Bees
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
The Dark House 
.  . 
Trust the simple things, she said then, to lead us
through this dark house, hands outstretched to feel
what we can’t see, as we touch a wall,
a table, or a chair we can sit in and wait
for morning. Maybe we’ll talk of small pleasures
 . 
or just listen to each other’s breath. We might seem to see
dreams flicker through our open eyes,
though it needs to be darker, even darker than it is now,
and they only flicker briefly. Don’t be scared.
We can hold hands and listen for our heartbeats, and maybe
 . 
if we can locate a window in the wall,
we can open it and let the outside darkness
rush in with its clarity and wildness; we can sit here
talking of what we imagine must live
out here, waiting for first light – like we are –
 . 
or moving through the dark like the moon does, pulling
the tides inside us, oceans we might even
swim out in, naked and warm, until morning
when we’ll be out of sight, so far from shore
our lives there might go on without us.
 . 
Michael Hettich
from The Halo of Bees
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
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