Tuesday, November 12, 2019

But What about the Honey?

-         - September, 2015


There was only one candidate, really, that had so many opposite pairs
of small rounded leaves.

We saw it first, if you ever see anything a first time,
waiting for the bus to Orient.

The field guide insisted on thorns. Long thorns, strong enough
to nail shingles to a roof.

And pods full of seeds swimming in pulp that tasted of honey?
It was a legume for god's sake.

Its roots probably bound nitrogen.

I trusted its identity when I found the female.

Her branches were sagging. She was overwhelmed
with pods--weeping like a willow.

What towns wanted were fruitless, thornless males.
Fewer seedlings to weed. Less bird shit

smeared across windshields. Can one female keep parked rows
of males healthy? Will they keep her

brimming with seeds each fall? Why do poems about stones,
tumbling in forever receding waters,

make me so fucking sad?

Friday, March 22, 2019

The Mournful Song of the Varied Thrush


In the early days before the internet,
before all these portable devices,
before location – you remember –
how did we know when the sun would rise?
How did we know those long clear notes
coming through the trees
are sung by a solitary thrush?
We don’t need to know to stop and listen,
but give his loss a name and others might hear.

Friday, February 22, 2019


When you are a crow and you are
forever looking down on people,
do you find you still think highly of them?

Monday, September 3, 2018

Terre Verte


Terre Verte

The ripe red tomato was green first
and will return to green earth
when the pink and red flesh
fades to feed next seasons baskets of fruit.

The Tusquittee Painting Queens
laid down an undercoat of terre verte
to neutralize the red and pink
and make cheeks and hands glow

Hands that cup a butterfly, a hummingbird
Hands that hold a newborn or follow your
lover around the dance floor

Chloe made a warm space
for the Tusquittee Queens to paint and drink tea

To Chloe, from a distance,
you were loved by all.
I stroked her cheek
brushed her hair back from her eyes
I held her hand in mine
as in prayer
and promised her
I would love her the rest of my life

To Chloe, from a distance,
This could be you here
and me there
spread across the green earth.

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.)

Monday, April 2, 2018

Approaching getting louder

Approaching getting louder


Listening from other rooms
to half answers half heard about school
I close my eyes, think of trees
and husband my fathering opinions.
I can ignore a car backfiring,
the curdling screams of bleeding cats,
the helicopter throbbing overhead,
but news about her hard day
or planned family outings
sends me readying. Listen.
My ringing ears hear gasoline drip
in every mothering voice.

Friday, December 1, 2017