Showing posts with label rocks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rocks. Show all posts

Sunday, May 29, 2022

Settled

Jack's tombstone wears the oak's mantel:
lichens rust the pink granite; tannins set
his name and the chiseled teak pattern
in relief. His view is good. The trees cast
long stark shadows down the green slope.
A jogger in a red jacket makes his way
along the drive. I expect a blue jay to perch
atop the stone but they accept Jack's claim.
Together the robins and blue jays watch me
listen as the Gladstone passes this good spot.




Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Prayer from Gray’s River

Prayer from Gray’s River

When a mother kills the light in her son’s eyes
god moves stone like water for miles
and ash rains for months.

I collect mudstone from a bleached river bed
exposed by floods that come
most winters. I build

a cairn on my window sill. If I leave
the cairn sit memories leach
away so sometimes

when I’m strong I take a piece and taste the grit.
The last time I admonished Jack
I can’t recall my words

but under a glaring sun, I see his flushed cheeks,
his sweat-matted hair brushed back. I see
tears as he watches me

instruct him to work harder with the same eyes
that challenged his mother. It’s not like
I’m going to die!


he vowed two nights before she drugged him and
drowned him with a pillow.

The memory is unlithified--I return it
gently--undo only the slightest
flake with my breath.

(previous draft: click here.)

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Prayer at Gray’s River

Prayer at Gray’s River

When a mother seizes one life
god moves mudstone like water
for miles toward the Pacific
and ash rains for months.

I build a little cairn from mudstone
crumbling along a bleached river bed
exposed by floods most winters.
If I leave the cairn sit,

Jack’s memories leach away.
So sometimes when I’m strong
I take one shard from the top
and taste the grit.

The stone is weak, unlithified,
like my memories.
I place it back gently--
undo only the slightest fleck

with my breath. The last time
I admonished Jack
I can’t remember my words
but I do see a glaring sun

and his cheeks flushed from drills
his sweat-matted hair
brushed back, the tears in his eyes
while he watches me instruct him to work harder

with the same eyes that challenged his mother,
It’s not like I’m going to die!
he vowed, two nights before she drugged him
and drowned him with a pillow.

Saturday, April 30, 2016

Cairn

Cairn

Stone cries sand.
Stone cries soil.
A stone cries memory.
I had to stack the rocks
to make sense of them.

I don't like decorative stone
far from its native habitat,
the imported stone
that displaces weeds momentarily.

Friday, April 22, 2016

an Ars Poetica

an Ars Poetica
Mother says unless you have something nice to say …
she struggles now to finish
to say anything at all.
Mom stopped watching news a long time ago.
Maybe she will watch the weather when there's a storm in the Gulf.
If my sisters push her hard she’ll watch an Antiques Roadshow
and wake smiling when some hidden gem is unearthed
people are happy then.
Dust is wiped away.
What mom didn’t say was that if I had a rock
bleached almost completely white
tumbled smooth by decades of breaking waves
so smooth you can see a glacier’s heart beating inside
and if behind one line of cloud
the sun was setting
and if it was warm,
and if the road was empty,
and if a young crab clasped the culvert grate
and an osprey surveyed the salt marsh from its perch
so that the only noise I hear are pebbles
rocking in the gentle surf and H’s breath.
And if H chose the rock
for a photo she sent her daughter
wishing she were near
what mom didn’t say was
that if I have that rock
I have a poem.


Friday, April 15, 2016

Not grief. Not yet.

If I stare long enough
will these surf-scoured stones
on my window sill glow
green and pink like tourmaline
the way they were animated
by sound and rain when
I bent and picked them up?
Will they glow like embers
seething in a draft from the dark
outside? Do the stones remember
the difference between sound
and bay? Do they remember
when the glacier dragged its feet?
I will come upon more rocks
where sand blunts the ocean's edge
and I will place them on the sill
by the others wet with memory.

From Passaic Headwaters, Truman Beach near Orient, NY, Buffalo Mountain,
and the ones in this poem, from Ft. Worden.













"Sitting Waiting Wishing" by Jack Jackson makes me feel much more sad than this poem; hence the title.

Other notes:  In Praise of Shadows by Tanizaki Jun'ichirō (as the revisions progressed, has become less relevant for this poem). Keats on negative capability. I'm also slowly reading Dillard's Pilgrim at Tinker Creek.

Thursday, July 23, 2015

The Black Sun

The Black Sun

1.
I sit far back from the center where people walk
their strollers and throw frisbees. Depending on what
the wind is saying I sit in or out of the late afternoon sun.
A small pool beside me collects coins. My focal point
is a big round polished piece of black granite,
an obelisk rolled upon itself glazed and lumpy
like a chocolate donut. It must have arranged my chair.
I survey the orange and red flowers in rows,
the reservoir, the redwoods, and after each in turn
I’m returned to Noguchi's Black Sun.

2.
Back a second hotter day I take the same chair.
The fountain is raucous. I smell chlorine in cool
mist when the breeze shifts. A woman spreads
a towel on the green lawn. She rolls up her shorts
and kicks off her sandals. I guess she's near Jack’s
age if he were here. Broader views contain more
bare shoulders and frisbees and trees, but the black
stone fills the same still space within me. You ask
me to say goodbye to Jack--an act of kindness--
a happiness project. I know your request is rhetorical.
Shadows track the listing earth day by day around
the sun. Jack is far away and moves as the sun
moves. If he could hear me would I say goodbye?

3.
My chair is occupied when I finally get here.
A neighborly lecture on street side parking
soured my sour mood. The lawn has browned.
The sun not the sculpture selects my new chair.
I seek relief in shadows from other people.
Blocked by a tree what does the Black Sun say
now? Last night I had two dreams. Jack is young.
We are on an ocean liner. Jack falls over the side;
I jump in after. In the other he wants to explore
dark and narrow steps leading underground. I fear
the dank cramped space--no room to turn and find
the sky. Don't go far, I say. I fear I won’t follow
when his fears awaken and I hear Papa? And towels!
To keep him clean! He wants five—I let him take three.
In my goddamn dream! The Black Sun is a ridiculous
metaphor for what it is like for years to lose your son.
It is cold and dead. Through its aperture, I can’t see
Jack's ashes on Hurricane Ridge. There is a reason
why mountains appear blue and blur in the distance.
Color disperses, contrast softens, background bleeds
through, and blue, blue light comes faster.

Reality calls for a name, for words, but it is unbearable, and if it is touched, if it draws very close, the poet’s mouth cannot even utter a complaint of Job: all art proves to be nothing compared with action. Yet to embrace reality in such a manner that it is preserved in all its old tangle of good and evil, of despair and hope, is possible only thanks to distance, only by soaring above it--but this in turn seems then a moral treason. - Czeslaw Milosz's Nobel Lecture

Saturday, June 2, 2012

inter

inter

at your plot
in trees above
the Gladstone tracks
the sun is your hat today
you never saw
your sister run
her rocking horse
a straw brimmed hat
trimmed in pink
grooms her hair
a braided strap
reins her regal chin
she wouldn’t know
Dale Evans, Trigger
in black and white
from my childhood
even then rerun
red dimpled rolls
of Kilgore caps
strings of Black Cat
firecrackers
not hers
not yours
what makes this plot sacred
will I bury your ashes here
without ceremony
without lily puddled ritual
before I leave
and carve god in caps in stone