Sunday, September 7, 2008

New Poem

LIGHT

There are limits to what can be said:
The warm dander of belly-morning skin.
This amuses me: kitchen clatter,
stainless-steel pots and pans,
a kettle on the stove warming water for tea.
I am sitting at the table watching light
filter gray through the East-facing window.
A cardinal perches on the second-
story outer sill – and what of that
brilliant feather-red crown of tuft?
Later tonight I will switch the lamps down low,
and we will burn candles, whisper kisses to 
each other in their dim flame – like last week
when we made love to shingle-patter rain,
finished, and waited on the back porch
for the thick of August heat,
breathed-in wetness from the air.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Pulling a Stump

"Pulling a Stump" was first written in March. The idea, in the beginning, was to capture the perpetual existence of the tree - the stump. Perhaps it remains only in spirit or in memory, but that is enough. The tree persists nonetheless; hence the comparison in the first stanza, "The old stump... stands out/like a scar in the unplowed field." Like a scar, which reminds us of an event in the distant past - a pain, even - the cleft in the dirt left by the uprooted stump reminds the reader of the tree. As the scar continues to remind the bearer of a fleeting moment of the past, allowing that moment to replay over and over in the mind, the fissure reminds us of the tree. In that vein the tree continues to exist, its memory perpetuating in our minds, allowing the tree to transcend its own being - the temporality of the world - and in a sense become eternal.

PULLING A STUMP

The old stump, a black thing
with roots stretching
deep into the earth, stands out
like a scar in the unplowed field.
Today, Father and I go into
the field to pull it.

We carry shovels and pickaxes,
hopes to sever the roots
of the nourishing dirt -
to break the flat top into bits
of dead-gray wood.

My axe breaks it in two,
and with a few more swings,
to pieces of earthy mulch.

Next come the shovels.
We heave them into the dirt,
splitting the roots
near the base.
I push the shovel head
beneath the broken roots,
and we lift the stump
bottom-up from the ground.

We drop it into the bed
of Father's pick-up
and drive it off the field.

All that is left is a fissure
in the earth,
where next year dandelions
will flower out,
reminding us of a tree uprooted.

Monday, April 21, 2008

Faith

Good writing often comes when it is least expected. Over the last several weeks I have found myself mulling over old poems, reading work by new poets, subscribing to new magazines - all in search of inspiration. I wanted to write something fresh. Something new. Ever since I came back from Guatemala in March it seemed I hadn't been able to write anything good. Nothing was coming together - which, at least in my experience, is what a good poem must do on its own. Finally, last week, it hit me. I don't know what it was, but something clicked. I found myself writing out what became a two-page long poem. Then, last night, lying in bed and looking up at the ceiling, contemplating what it means to find peace and where I had seen it most in my life, it came again. The words started turning over in my mind. At first it was just a tone, then an image. Soon it became sounds, which then formed into words. Finally, I had to get up. I had to write this down before I forgot the words so perfectly wrought in my creative conscious. This is what came.


FAITH

Zacapa, where hot
wind whistles
in tamarind trees
and we lay star staring
on the roof at night,
the sing-song sound
carried to our ears,
and through the leaves
we saw it –
a single-room church
with white plastic
chair pews, where dirty,
starving, people still
come to pray.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Dandelion Wine

A poem written in early spring, on a line from Thomas Pynchon's 'The Crying of Lot 49.'

DANDELION WINE

In April, you gathered weeds
from the field,
made dandelion wine -
blithe-picked flowers
for drink,
and the old ones, white windborne seeds,
to blow into the air.

Crushed yellow on the pestle,
you bled the juice
into bottles, added yeast,
let it sit, fermenting over months.

The next year, when we opened it,
you poured the wine,
gold into my glass.
We drank -
nourishing ghosts of dandelions,
the dead persisting in a bottle of wine.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Steer

The following poem, "Steer," is one I began working on in mid-December. I can hardly remember working for so long on a single poem, writing and rewriting, filling my journal with revisions. I cut, then expanded, then cut some more. Finally I was able to come up with a draft that I liked. It's been sitting for some time.

Now that it is finished (or at least as close to finished as I can make it), there are a number of things I admire about it - the description of the Texas landscape, the steer wandering off from the ranch, the quick process of dying, and the slow process of decay. The last lines beg the reader to ask the question: what does this all mean? Where is the purpose behind the process of decay; breaking life into dirt? And, of course, what follows: what is the reason for living, if only to return to dust?


STEER

Death is a way of speaking,
breaking bits of life into dirt.
In August, the raw mountains
of Mexico shade the plain,
which stretches out across the
border into the Texas sun.
Thickets of brush grow where
the river dries up, its many
estuaries reduced to small
pools, stagnant water in
channels of red-dry rock.
A little way out from the stream,
a steer wanders off from Laughlin Ranch,
grunting with each step, hooves
catching on cracks in the soil.
Stumbling into the red rock-bed,
his joints go limp, body collapses.
In silence, he stares toward
the mountain shade.
Within the hour the steer’s
eyes tire and go dry – he dies.
Over days, weeks, his eyes
come to harbor shadows,
empty to the open air.
His teeth become exposed.
His chest, a bare cage of bone.
A cloud of orange dust rises
in the desert breeze, fades
to gold as it reaches eye level.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Metroversity Writing Contest

A poem of mine, "Hart County," was recently named honorable mention in this year's Metroversity Writing Contest. The poem was posted in this blog in November, I believe, and is being published in this year's volume of Ariel Magazine. Will post more writing soon!

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Stick Elegy

Unfortunately, I haven't had much time to write recently. What I have written has been more and more difficult to complete, and I have had little time to do any free reading. What reading I have done has mostly been out of journals and magazines. I came across this poem a few weeks ago, and thought I'd share it. It is titled "Stick Elegy," and is by Terrance Hayes, a teacher and writer at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. The poem was recently published in the March 2008 edition of Poetry magazine.

STICK ELEGY

The dead were still singing "Turn the lights down low"
Beneath Yellow Bridge where years before, clowning
And ass out, Stick jumped with nothing but the State
Championship trophy in his righteous clutch. The water
Was supposed to be deepest there, and for three seasons
Straight MVPS: Charlie "Fly" Kennison, Long Timmy Long,
And Rocket Jefferson, those are the names I knew, jumped

Free. But Stick's ankle broke. I fished him out, crumpled
And bawling like the day he was born, like an object of
Baptism, and a life of bad luck followed in the shape of
Floods and fractured lightning, and then, numb, tooth-
Less, and changed, the dead refused burial, striking out, 2
By 2, 4 by 4, from the morgue house to raise trouble at
The bridge. I started hearing birds everywhere after that.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Morning

The following is a poem I began toward the end of the Fall semester. As always, I drafted it in my notebook, and the proceeded to type it up on my computer. I thought it was finished, and let it sit for a number of weeks. I came back to it recently, and realized a number of mistakes, as well as a few areas of improvement. After making the necessary changes, I believe it is close to being finished.

MORNING

Condensation gathers on the window.
I lean toward you, half-dreaming,
and nuzzle the depth of your shoulders.
Your neck, long and slender,
glows white in the cool light of morning.
The skin of your thigh is calm.
Outside, the jingle of car keys carries
to our room on the third story,
engine groan sputtering in the February cold.
6 AM, not yet time to wake.
I close my eyes and imagine the day
to come - clatter of dishes, knife on fork,
to plate, and wash. Black leather boots
on hardwood floor, beating from table to table -
and all through the day I know I'll be
thinking of this - bed, light, calm -
longing to nestle in the warm blue of blankets,
musing of the day to come.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Untitled Poem

Lately, I feel that I haven't been able to really finish any work. Over the last month or so I've written a great number of short, sort of fragmentary pieces, but only one that has been relatively conclusive. What I am posting here is another of these fragments. Maybe someone can give me insight as to what I should do with it.

POEM

The cove-thicket water is frozen a foot deep.
Deer prints mark a path in the snow.
I step onto the lake, let my
rubber boot-soles clop on the surface,
listen for silence.

Beneath my feet flit the backs
of death-cold salmon,
in the light of a white-wall sky...

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Music

This poem, "Music," is inspired by a Frank O'Hara poem of the same title. It is one I worked on over Christmas break, and I am posting it here tentatively. I'll probably make some changes to the post sometime soon.

MUSIC

Fifth and Maine, by the Belvedere, Louisville, downtown,
I watch as a horse pulls a small carriage, man and woman
side by side, a heavy blanket on their lap,
the horse's iron shoes clopping on the cold cement.
A woman in a red scarf and purple tweed coat
paces the corner, pressing the silver button,
ready to cross the street. I listen to the hum of engines,
sputtering, impatient, waiting for the light to change green.
A group of Somalian bongoists are drumming
near the doorway to the Bank of America Building;
navy blue cardigan sweaters, capped in black and gray.
Warm mist rises from their mouths in musical exhale.