Wednesday, September 11, 2024

FOOSBALL

 

Sometime during the night -- tall, silent trees still
breathing the lingering heat of daylight --
my older brother and his high school friend released
the unattended foosball table from the confines
of the White Bear Lake Yacht Club, where Scott and Zelda
once whiled away their early days, their smart
summer whites billowing like sails against the blue,
like all those blank pages waiting patiently to be filled.
But my brother, in his cut-off jeans and rust-colored
tank top, would not have been thinking of this;
nor would he have considered the first quick sketches
of this game on a matchbox in some British pub,
nor the poet who perfected it so that the children of
the Spanish Civil War could still know laughter and play.
He would have been walking calmly, deliberately,
laughing, I suspect, under his breath with his buddy,
up the four long blocks to our falling-down house
with its equally falling-down porch and garage,
his dying car on makeshift blocks beside it.
He might have reminded himself, as he often did
to me, not to run or look afraid. To be cool.
The next day he polished it the way he polished
that car, a kind of blessing, and we played
outside on our uneven patch of lawn, islands
of dry dirt on either side, bright sun shining down
upon us, and our newly acquired pitch of green;
and for one brief moment, the day, the neighborhood,
if not the world itself, belonged to us alone,
as we spun those black handles into a steady blur,
breaking our own rule, showing off, just to see
who could hit the hardest into that narrow goalpost,
its white plastic ball echoing, even now.

Thursday, September 5, 2024

BETWEEN BURSTS OF THUNDER, WE HEAR ROBINS SINGING


If we cannot learn the song
of these birds, calling through
the shuddering dark, let us at least
better study their silence.
If we cannot know the secrets
of their flight, let us at least
acquire the stillness they have
perfected on thin air.

Friday, August 30, 2024

MAN AND CROW

 

No one remembers now how or when, but the crow took to Grandpa Nels, and he took to the crow, until it began to follow him far into the field, the two of them talking about whatever it is that a man and a crow discuss -- the likelihood of rain, the ordinary things that matter most, or what it means to be alone on this earth. When he carried water from the well to the barn, again and again, the crow tagged along. When he fed the fox that slept in the shed, never bothering the turkeys in their pens, the crow kept watch. Grandma said the bird was so smart it could count and answer your questions, and always knew when you were talking about it. They took to speaking Finnish, the way they did to keep the kids from listening when they argued. They forgave it for stealing coins and buttons, a thimble, and even Grandpa's teeth, which were eventually returned. When it vanished, no one knew just why. It simply had crow work to do, perhaps a family of its own to watch over. But it left its absence in all the places it had been. Grandpa's shadow grew thin, his body frail, and whatever had been spoken between them remained so, white clouds sweeping clear the summer blue sky.

Sunday, August 25, 2024

SECOND GHAZAL FOR TRISH

 

There's no burying you, no risk of forgetting;
though you would say the past is merely escape.
Whatever truce you made with life was brief,
its tentative agreements offering you no escape.
We were so young, what could we have known?
But I knew, even then, that love was more than escape.
Some days we read for hours, daylight shifting.
You said that poetry was the opposite of escape.
It was, we imagined, you and me against the world,
until the world itself managed to escape.
In the end, you pulled away from everyone,
your stubborn isolation a poor imitation of escape.
The prayer I offer now is one of silence,
the unspoken understanding of no escape.

Friday, August 16, 2024

PERSONAL EFFECTS

 

The family says that Uncle Leo was too sensitive
for the army, prone as he was to daydreams
and poetic whimsy, his soft, pale hands designed
for painting a canvas or cradling a violin,
not the long rifle and bayonet slung over his shoulder.
In the sepia-tinted photos, he looks like a 1950s
matinee idol on location, killing time between takes.
But he could shoot, like any Finnish farm boy,
could drop a buck or a boy in the wrong uniform
if need be. He just didn't understand the need.
Maybe he never recovered from the scythe
striking his head as a boy, hiding among the tall hay.
Maybe something inside him just kept falling.
When he drown at the foot of Mount Fuji,
the dark envelope of water sealing him indefinitely,
Grandma Tyyne went mad with her grief,
following him there a few short months later.
What was sent back wasn't much -- his boots shined,
uniformed pressed and folded, a few small
souvenirs, family photos, Japanese coins and yen.
I like to think that the birthday card he bought
for aunt Leona made it safely back , warped
only slightly by water, its smudged blue letters
looping back on themselves like waves.
I like to think she smiled at his sweetness
before her eyes clouded and all but disappeared.

Sunday, August 11, 2024

YOU CAME TO ME AGAIN

You came to me again in my sleep, as if nothing had changed between us. You wanted to talk about old movies, talk about money and how it made no sense. I had longed for the sweetness of the mundane, the steady rhythm of the dripping faucet wearing away the porcelain of the bathroom sink, dust building its imaginary creatures below our feet. Most of all, I didn't want to tell you that you were gone, slipped silently from this world while you were unaware. But I wanted you to mourn the loss of yourself, as I have, this life of chores and small, fleeting pleasure, the stubborn yet fragile body which gave you so much trouble. Of course, you were better at explaining things, as you often did for me. The words I offer are half-formed and ordinary, hovering between us, neither moving nor standing still. Last week, your sister called to remind me that everyone in our dreams is but a different version of ourselves. If this is so, I am again talking to myself, while you are wondering whether to accept my explanation, whether to answer with words, or the silence we have agreed upon for so long. 

 

Sunday, August 4, 2024

CANNED LAUGHTER

 


Most of the laughter we heard when
growing up did not come from the grownups
around us -- who seemed perpetually
glum, reserved in speech and movement --
but from the canned laughter rising
and falling from the small, dusty speakers
of bulky television sets -- sharp, tinny laughter
you could hear from the next room,
even if you had somehow missed the joke.
Even Saturday morning cartoons,
that most sacred of childhood rituals,
had a laugh track with which to instruct us,
not unlike the voices at church, hesitant
at first, then growing robust as their numbers
swelled and converged, demonstrating
to us when to sing out, if not precisely how.
Say what you will, but there's something
strangely reassuring in knowing
that all of that laughter from ages past --
the low, persistent titter, the chortle
and guffaw, the outright snort -- is there,
waiting patiently to be opened again,
in times of war and uncertainty,
when grief has once again shrouded us
in its oily rags, following us like an unremittent
beggar -- times not so unlike our own.


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