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Posts Tagged ‘imagery’

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[with 3 poems by Bob Wickless]
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Not Wind, Not Water
+++++ In Memory of Rod Jellema
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I would study, if I could, not wind
Nor water, but the silence after wind,
The scattering after second motion
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On a darkened shore. Tests, if given,
Would consist of laying pages
End to end, the opening of endless
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Information, movements on the beach
At dawn. Neither light nor darkness overall,
But the space of intersection . . .
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The X between the film and camera
Where easy motion crosses over
One to the world. There I’d sit,
 . 
X’ed out, oblivious, yet hugely intelligent.
Schools of fish would soon dismiss me,
Flotsam would pass, failures survive,
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But I, jetsam, drunk beyond knowledge,
Would float aimless, issuing assignments,
Collecting homework from the stars.
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Bob Wickless
from The Secret Care the World Takes, The Orchard Street Press, Gates Mills, OH, © 2023
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Not much to see here this time of year? But that’s exactly why we’ve come. While Linda and Margaret chase Bert down the wide camellia-lined promenades of the university garden, Josh and I take an inconspicuous side path. Not many folks meandering these narrow trails today. Winter-brown, bloomed-out, leaf-strewn: welcome to Native Plants.
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Meadow, borders, understory, they draw us right in. Just a month ago these pale bristles, fuzzballs, and tufts  were brightly hued racemes, cymes, and corymbs. So inviting. Now begging for dispersal. I let my hand cup a stem and run up over the feathery head. I examine my palm – dozens of tiny seedlets, each with its stiff barbule. My, my — Josh just happens to have a sheaf of miniature brown envelopes in his shirt pocket. He hands me one and I dribble my catch into it. How many different species of goldenrod and aster? And we still have an entire little prairie to traverse.
 . 
A month after last April’s tornado crossed our neighborhood, after the cherry picker and chainsaws had gone home, after the ‘dozer had pushed two-ton trunks and root balls to the edge of our property past the Duke Energy cut, I imagined that the bare clay and churned up leaf mold would wait for winter, barren, when I could sow the half-acre with something new. But this summer the exposed earth received something it had patiently waited decades for. Sunlight. This fall the slope is a jostling upright congregation of pilewort and poke, and knee deep in damnable invasive stilt grass.
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Best get to it. It’s a lot of square meters, but I have a fire rake and a 5-pound hazelhoe I use for trail workdays. And on the screened porch I have a bag of bags, cold stratifying, waiting for January and a smooth, raked bed: native silver plume grass, big bluestem, Indian grass my friend Joe gathered from his meadow on the Mitchell River; wingstem, crownbeard, ironweed I’ve been pulling during hikes along the MST; store-bought half-kilos of Southeast Wildflowers; and a little miniature brown envelope, stuffed full, and hand-labeled “Duke Mix.”
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Two Poems From School
1. Drawing Horses
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There was one slow girl from grade two
And three, unable to multiplicate, ill-
At-ease, and long to devise, who tried
But tired of her dull and daily work,
Turned the smudge of your yellow page off
And began to draw horses.
 . 
Riderless, stream of those great manes back,
her horses rode out of no course but gladly off
The end of every page to the end of every class.
 . 
And when that girl died in a white hospital
Kicked by no horse but the one deep inside
Galloping over her frail, fourth grade hide,
I though I would try drawing horses. But I,
I was no good.
 . 
So girl, who never learned much from school
But taught me a daily grace in the movement
Of horses, these are for you.
 . 
Bob Wickless
from The Secret Care the World Takes, The Orchard Street Press, Gates Mills, OH, © 2023
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❦ ❦ ❦
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When Bob Wickless signed my copy of The Secret Care the World Takes, he noted that while we have never met in person we share three things in common: poetry; North Carolina; the editorial generosity of Jack Kristofco at The Orchard Street Press. And a fourth thing – a year ago I featured Bob’s poem Prayer in Spring in another post extolling the wonders of native “weeds.”
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Bob is from Maryland and has “held many jobs” in his lifetime, but he wisely retired to Reidsville NC to reside in “the writingest state.” Secret Care takes seriously the creative task of reminding us of what we all share in common. Bob leads his characters by the hand, introduces them to us, places our hand in theirs and waits quietly while we gaze into each other’s eyes. That tender connection may be wistful, it may be sad, but there is also humor in these poems. Laughter. Joy.
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In the end may we become convinced that the World does care for us. Perhaps we may feel the tug to care also for the World and what it contains, what it nurtures, what it brings forth. Through the magic of poetry, this care is no longer secret.
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Check out The Orchard Street Press, its annual contest and anthology, Quiet Diamonds, and order Bob Wickless’s book HERE
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Solstice: The Children’s Ward
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The secret care the world takes
Has pressed closed all the petals
Of tiny summer flowers
As if darkness might infuse
Those dying colors
With some thing they did not mean,
Some statement thy did not possess,
Some dream they could never intend.
 . 
It is in the same way rain,
Or even the thought of rain
Oncoming, turns up a maple’s leaves
Like fragile buckets –
Or a whole forest of maples,
A hundred, thousand, children’s hands
Raised in anticipation
Of the sky’s sweet promise.
 . 
And it is evident, too, the easy way
You breathe, so effortlessly in sleep,
How your small, secret bodies know,
Always, exactly what is required
Of this world and the next
To simply sleep
A sleep simple enough
To trust all your flowers to love.
 . 
Bob Wickless
from The Secret Care the World Takes, The Orchard Street Press, Gates Mills, OH, © 2023
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❦ ❦ ❦
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[with 3 poems by John Hoppenthaler]
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The Tiniest Toad in Moore County, NC
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catches my eye, hopping with great care
over the rough flagstone. Don’t spook her,
I think: if a toad springs from your path,
death is sure to follow. Never turn out
a toad at the threshold: the worst luck
will follow for a year. Finding the creature
in your home, remove it to nature
with kindness, for witches posses them
as familiars. If you happen on a toad’s dead body,
place it on an anthill until the flesh is eaten away.
Its bones that don’t bob easy on water,
those you wrap in white linen and hang
in a corner to engender love. On a new moon,
if the bones float in a stream, they’re charmed; slide
them into you pocket or hang them from your neck
ere the devil gets them first. Then you can witch,
it’s said and won’t be witched yourself. She leaps
from stone near the fake frog pond’s edge,
where the real frog eyes her with desire
from his tenuous perch on a lily pad.
She nestles under a leaf to hide her nudity.
Here in the poet’s garden, she promises me
her tiny bones one day, a kiss for my civility.
 . 
John Hoppenthaler
from Night Wing over Metropolitan Area, Carnegie Mellon University Press, Pittsburgh, PA; © 2023
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❦ ❦ ❦
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How many seasons have passed for this tiny six-legged creature? How may growings and swellings before the last stricture, the ultimate fullness? And then the splitting, the release – how many times? The naiad can’t count – 20? 30? – but this one feels much different. Organs reforming within the cuticle, gills discarded, first glimmer of urgency to mate, and now wings! A long pause while invisible forces array; a stillness, a shiver; finally a mighty shrug splits her hard skin down the back and Stonefly crawls forth.
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In minutes her new cuticle darkens and her newborn wings harden, ready for flight. Ready for two more weeks of life and the laying of one thousand eggs in this swift stream where she has crept for three years. Egg to nymph to imago, this is the adult, the perfect likeness of Stonefly.
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Imago is from the ancient root *AIM, to copy; from the Latin for image and also the source of that faculty of mind which creates images: Imagination. I’ve held this word in awe for its creative power to conjure worlds out of dust. I’ve made it my mantra, to imagine, to spin webs of words that may charm from a handful of protoindoeuropean grunts a shimmering image never before . . . imagined.
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But isn’t the act of imagining actually mundane and relentlessly unremarkable? We humans live and breathe imagination, ho hum. We constantly take the dumb flow of reality and make its meaning. You speak and I string the sentences into some semblance of the thing you intend to express (one hopes, for both of our sakes, with more than passing accuracy). I anticipate the next minute, the next hour or day, and walk into the picture I’ve painted in my mind. Last clean socks? Do some laundry. Imagination.
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Let’s also not underestimate imagination’s darker self. Where else does evil arise but in the bleak and hateful poison of our own imaginings? Who creates our own pain and neuroses but we ourselves? How often do I ruminate about something I’ve said or done, imagining how I”ve affected another, how they feel, how they now think about me? How many wakeful nights have I ticked off all the possible futures that could open new boxes of pain, all the things I dread but just might be required someday to shoulder, the hour by hour of everything that could go wrong?
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These questions lead me to this crossroad: why does the dreadful so readily slip itself into my imagining when the beautiful is hovering all around? The Stonefly nymph molts thirty times or more, growing each time a bit larger but still in the same immature likeness, until that final ecdysis into winged adult, the imago. During all those years of formation, does she imagine her final weeks, her brief flash and certain death, effete and fading in the leaf litter or sudden breakfast of a trout?
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Or does she summon up stream froth, sharp air and sky, wings strong enough to lift her free, sweet nectar and beautiful desire beckoning? Possibilities. Even an insect’s fate is not altogether determined. How much more might this human mind, with all the likenesses and signifiers and connections it loves to conjure, create the very future it is able to imagine?
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Hummingbirds & Eagles
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The whir of hummingbird wings. First here,
then fluttering over the pond, the wall of pine,
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afternoon sun’s mirrored lazy flickering.
And the place where, just last weekend,
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we watched an eagle stand with certainty
on the bank before dipping into a long pull
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of water, before lifting over greenery
and disappearing, as eagles seem destined to do.
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Hummingbirds are cantankerous creatures
at the feeder, taking time only to hover briefly,
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tiny bodies flapping under their riveted heads,
bickering for position, fencing with long beaks,
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then thrusting them into the well. Sometimes
we disappear – or so it seems – into the neuroses
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of hummingbirds. We want the nectar, that’s all
and, when it’s gone, we apologize, my love, and fall
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into making up. We drink deeply of it, approach
even the nobility of eagles. Hummingbirds
 . 
can fly backwards, sideways, hover up and down;
they wear wedding clothes their rest of their lives.
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Fashioned from leftover feathers the gods
used to create other birds, their long tongues
 . 
bypass the bitter protections of flowers.
They bring good luck, so we offer them succor.
 . 
I hold the funnel in place while you pour sugar-
water, blood-red, into the feeder, steady
 . 
me as I stretch from the footstool
to hang it from a small hook under the eave.
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I step down into waiting arms; you sink your talons
nearly to the bone, tell me you’ll never leave.
 . 
John Hoppenthaler
from Night Wing over Metropolitan Area, Carnegie Mellon University Press, Pittsburgh, PA; © 2023
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❦ ❦ ❦
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John Hoppenthaler’s poems travel an ever-changing landscape of imagination: through town and countryside, pausing to observe or plunging forward, celebrating and mourning. The vignettes are so many and so varied I might ask myself, “How many people are speaking here?” but the poet’s voice penetrates, clear and certain. The themes that wind through Night Wing over Metropolitan Area are not a procession of highway billboards illuminated by megawatts but more like those back-road historical markers you have to pull over and take time to make out. There are glimpses of his mother’s grim decline from dementia, of his father’s death and his own struggle. There is humor, exasperation, tenderness in his journey as parent and spouse. The travels, despite “night wing” in the title, are not supersonic. One meanders from poem to poem at the speed of wonder, reflection, gradual dawning. And the opening image of a metropolitan cityscape from altitude does not prophecy distance or aloofness; these poems  pull and draw into proximity, ever closer, the intimacy of love and inexorable loss.
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It is possible to walk a familiar path lost in thought and completely miss your turning. In John Hoppenthaler’s poems we may think we recognize the waypoints, know where we’ve been and where we’re going, but these lines are always poised and more nimble than we expect. They can pivot in a moment to reveal an unexpected connection or juxtaposition. Or return to a trope from an earlier poem and shine light from an entirely new angle. To pull tight a frayed thread, to knit the disparate threads together, to weave from confusion a whole cloth of meaning – what better use for imagination and its poetry?
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 . 
I knew I was going to enjoy this book when I opened to the dedication page and discovered a Grateful Dead lyric (Uncle John’s Band – I saw them play this live in Cleveland in 1973) preceded by The Gospel of Matthew. John Hoppenthaler is the author of Domestic Garden, Anticipate the Coming Reservoir, and Lives of Water, all also published by Carnegie Mellon University Press. With Kazim Ali, he is co-editor of This-World Company. He teaches at East Carolina University, and you can purchase his book HERE.
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Night Wing over Metropolitan Area
++ after Yvonne Helene Jacquette
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Wing of a blackbird, wing
of a crow. If I seem a vulture
sometimes, on the wing, adrift
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toward carrion, indistinct architecture
of loss, its ambience . . . . The hydraulic
whine and thud of the landing gear, absence
 . 
of towers, moderate tremor of shear
and turbulence. No, not buildings, only
insistent light that props them up; their
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corporeal bodies dissolved – enormous
emptiness, which itself is full of color, ghosts
of light beyond emptiness, that which defines them,
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that which looms outside the frame, space
between us,, the pregnant darkness of our
city, and a million tiny votives that oppose.
 . 
The night wing hangs, sags toward you with
gravity, weight of a thousand corpses, screech
of a virus, that shrill hawk as I circle
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in a holding pattern, and all I can see is
primary color, pointillism of what’s left
behind or flown toward, fugitive colors,
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especially the blue rims of your eyes. I lift
or descend, and it seems the same: proximity
may as well be absence; arrival means another
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place has been left behind, and I’m taking
off or landing to deliver what support I can.
We are two dark birds, together, keeping
 . 
raptors at bay – there, out over the river.
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John Hoppenthaler
from Night Wing over Metropolitan Area, Carnegie Mellon University Press, Pittsburgh, PA; © 2023
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Doughton Park Tree 4/30/2022
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[with 3 poems by Jane Shlensky]
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Balance
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Each morning Granny hobbles to the spring
uphill two miles with buckets in her hands
through woods now thick with frost, limbs cleared of leaves.
And over rocks almost atop a hill
behind her house, she sees the water gush,
and, slow with age, she stoops to clear away
the leaves and sticks that clot the pulses’ rush,
and, cracked cup in her hand, she dips into
“sweet water” as she calls it, gathered wild
as honey in abandoned rees, and pours
the nectar into metal milking pails
to carry down the mountain, arms held far
from hips and sides, all tense – as pugilists
might hold their arms, quite low with hands in fists.
But her fists grip the metal handle’s cut
into her palms, as water weighs her down
and down the well-worn path toward her house.
I offer her a new artesian well,
but she just laughs at me and shakes her head.
I ask if I may carry home the spring
for her, but she denies she wants the help
and says it gives her reason for a walk
among the trees on any given day
and carrying two buckets makes her sure
of foot and balanced in a world that’s not.
 . 
Jane Shlensky
from Barefoot on Gravel, Finishing Line Press, Georgetown, KY; © 2016
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❦ ❦ ❦
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I hate my anger more than I hate vomiting. The dead sick inevitability as it rises, how it makes my hands go cold and clenches my jaw. Disorienting, paralyzing rational thought. I am not going to let that anger out.
 . 
People tell you it’s best if you do. You have to let go of your anger. Maybe they’re right, because while it’s rising I don’t even see it coming, I don’t know to call it anger, I have no warning or defense that might prevent the stupid things I will do or the hurtful things I will say. I am afraid of the anger so I run from it before it can get me. Running, stumbling, I usually fall. Anger blasts me off balance.
 . 
Linda and I are sitting in the car. We had thought to take a walk in the gardens but now I’ve picked a fight with her, I can’t even recall about what. Linda has never let me get away with anything – I say this with honest, grudging admiration – and she says something now that jars me: “So is this what it’s going to be, then?” She is seeing something I can’t see. I admit it. I’m so confused, I tell her. And so she pushes me to relive the last couple of hours, ticking over the balance sheet – frustration at last night’s botched meeting, undercurrent of worried anticipation for tomorrow, niggling mis-steps and course changes this morning that had me snapping at a friend, patience evaporating to hot steam. Little angers mounting, not let out.
 . 
At last she wants to give me some justification. “Anyone would feel that way.” Not this time. True or not, I’m not buying that line. I’ve used it a hundred times to tamp down the anger, cover it and hide it. I don’t actually gain much insight into all this until much later, but there is one best way to regain some balance. To let anger’s own entropy cool it down to nothing. Sitting in the car next to Linda, I open up and own it. I said and did things that hurt people; I am responsible. I am sorry. I’m not happy with myself or the situation, but at least the two of us are finding enough balance to begin our walk after all.
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 . 
It hurts to walk barefoot on gravel. When I first met Linda, she and her sisters went barefoot all summer long. It was nothing for them to walk a mile or two on those tar-and-gravel Ohio roads or through the woods over dry twigs and sweetgum balls. I tried to keep up, limping like an old codger and next day lame. But I kept walking on sore feet because I wanted to keep up. I wanted to be near them.
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Jane Shlensky’s poems will not make you limp although they can be sharp and pointed. They will make you want to come along and keep up. Jane loves her characters, which she has drawn from generations of rural memories and red clay. She grew up in Yadkin County, NC, just across the muddy river from me, and she sees those farmers and grandmothers and wives more clearly than they ever saw themselves, perhaps. I don’t sense Jane imploring us to return to those old times and old ways. Instead, she shines her light on the truth of what brought her up and made her. What we carry in our pockets may change, but what we carry in our hearts does not. Read Barefoot on Gravel and find a moment of balance in a world that is so often not.
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❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Ain’t No Sunshine
 . 
“Oh, Lord,” she says, mixing the batter
for pancakes, the sausages sizzling,
the coffee perking in her mama’s pot
that’s so worn it’s barely metal.
She keeps it for the comforting perk,
fragrant life bubbling up, making promises.
 . 
But he’s in his wing chair, hunkered
over his guitar, his face blank as rain,
his strum, hum, strum him,
accompanying his slow moan.
His voice is like buttered rum, oiled
and warm as fever, just enough gravel
in his bass notes to scratch at her heart.
 . 
“Oh, Lord, that man,” she says to no one,
but her Lord hears everything in her heart.
She knows this as sure as she knows
the spit of oil before she tips the batter in,
as sure as she knows the hiss and blister,
bubble browning in the cakes.
 . 
He is having one of his blue days –
won’t fight the sadness, just leans on
that old guitar, curls in on himself
like a dog that hopes to lick the pain away.
He’s finding a sound to help him stand,
a trembling chord to lift a mighty weight.
 . 
He’s singing his own song and she knows it,
her heart clutching at his words, wishing
she could mother is sorrow away, feed
his hopes. She needs him, even if
they struggle every day. She turns to Jesus
kneeling on the wall and whispers,
“Dear Lord, that man there . . . we best
but some blueberries in these cakes.”
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Jane Shlensky
from Barefoot on Gravel, Finishing Line Press, Georgetown, KY; © 2016
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❦ ❦ ❦
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One Better
 . 
While we puzzled over the perfect
birthday gift for our father,
he packed up his fishing gear and
a few clothes and bid us farewell.
 . 
Jane Shlensky
from Barefoot on Gravel, Finishing Line Press, Georgetown, KY; © 2016
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❦ ❦ ❦
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❦ ❦ ❦
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 . Doughton Park Tree 2020-11-22

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