Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Flower Poems for Spring


Daiva's Flower
or A Japanese Gangster Paints Flowers

In Takeshi Kitano’s Fireworks
Sunflower lions smile
bright yellow and green
with infinite centers of seeds

like grains of sand through a microscope.
Grained gold,
speckled with green
sunflowers beam

stretching upward in summer heat.
They lined our garden once
shading lettuce
shooting fire above the leaves.

I don’t remember if we roasted the kernels
but I can taste the sun
when memory says we did
Salty crackle, sweet crumble

like a coffee cake topping
I sometimes smell
when walking across sandy soil
where sunflowers roar.


Aunt Audrea’s Flower

In pictures you smile down at West Virginia ravines:
New River Gorge
Grand View
Or wave from burnished leaf-covered hills
but your face shines brightest among roses.

I can see you blushing pinks and reds
in Ritter Park’s rose garden. Or it might
have been Cypress Gardens with its clock
tower and choreographed water skiers.
In memory, you sit on a stone wall

along rows of velvet rose bushes--
A flower yourself,
your gardenia dress dances,
its full skirt keeping time in the breeze,
rhythmic crinoline bursting like Florida hibiscus.

Sitting on a cool patio
smelling sulfur from salty sprinklers
(water for hard green spiked grasses)
I watch you laugh,
your head pulled back in joy

your eyes smiling at us all,
And,
at least in memory,
we all smile back
wishing we too had such perfect roses to share.

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Poems for Spring

The flowering trees have been spectacular this year, so I'm sharing a couple of pear tree poems:



The Tree House

My pear tree
grows tall
straight
budding
without fruit

good only
for bird feeding
watching
shading grass

on hot days
with dogs
flowering
on spring mornings

like a neighbor’s
Bartlett
where you
helped

pound stairs
in a crooked
trunk
because

you knew
how long
I needed
to jump

on a pogo stick
after
a meal
smelled

so much like
me
half-ripe
in summer

pear juice rolls down my chin.







After the Storm


The pear tree cracks

soft trunk opening

into milk coffee


broken rings swirl

            a spoon chases

melting sugar cubes 


 bark scatters

            black grounds soiling

                        a Formica lawn.          

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Losing James Garner (Or Just Light the Damn Thing on Fire!)


Losing James Garner (Or Just Light the Damn Thing on Fire!)

Your boyfriend’s dead he says
I laugh
ask which one

but think of James Garner

my own Murphy’s Romance (1985)
staying for supper only if breakfast is included.
How do you like your eggs?

A sign maybe.

The amaryllis stops swallowing.

The cilantro dries up.

I hear people went to the wrong Roanake this weekend.

I remember stooping under a sumac

turning red under leaves

and listening:

Fragrant bobs attract bees.

Stems transform into pipes
fluorescing under ultraviolet light.

I fear

my toes will grow numb
harden and fall off,
useless and without scent.

I fear

I’ll say, “I’m 60,”
(Just like Murphy)
                                   
and the door will slam

leaving me outside
in the coming dark.

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Tuesday Posts Begin: Poem for Mom


I spent some time with my mother a few weeks ago and was reminded of what a lovely and generous person she is. This poem is for her:

That Tangerine Bikini

Today I’m thinking about that bikini—tangerine
with gold clasps connecting lined cups and

panties—the one you surprised me with
my thirteenth summer, a distraction I guess

when we moved East, like the trip
to Twin Falls for trail hikes, pancake

tacos, and that bikini floating in the
lodge pool after a dive. You used

to shop like that—buying clothes and
gifts on the sly—not believing my

“nothing” when you asked me what I
wanted, even when I cut off the

Chrissy doll’s long red hair and stole
a brother’s Legos and skis.  That was

when there still were Sears catalogues, five
circles for Christmas,  question marks for school—

will you sew Butterick or get ready-to-wear?—
but shopping for shoes together, trying them

on side by side. And that orange
bikini—I wore it nearly a half

century ago. The first hand had not
yet sweltered in mine

and you

delivered

the towel.