Friday, December 7, 2018

This side of the looking glass




His face says it all, those hound dog eyes from beaten down to the ground, hands blistered from a half century of hammer and nails, cuticles broken and blanked from wounds that never heal, a titled wrist from some break he refused to cease his labor to allow to set right, his dark gaze meeting my mother’s that last time when I drove her to meet her brother in the hospital in Haledon, just as I later drove her to meet another brother before his passing, with the ghost of that one brother she never got to see before his death a decade earlier, me, acting as the grim reaper’s chauffeur, wondering if I will have to drive her hearse when her time comes, fate flickering along with the pain as she stares down, she remembering things I can never remember from a time with him well before I was born, the struggle through all those temporary homes they had to share during a time people still call The Great Depression, and her guilt later at resenting him when she went mad and he had to admit her to a hospital not too different from this, as if both stepped through the same mirror, exchanging places so that now he danced with the mad hatter and she had to watch helplessly, knowing exactly how he feels, and how she – no one can help him, and he can’t even help himself, his face framed now by the small rectangular of glass upon which his heavy breathing leaves clouds of steam, and he too weak to even sketch out letters of affection with a finger he cannot life, she staring through the haze at his shredded coat and worn sleeves, the stain of his months living on the street through the roughest memory since they were kids, the smell of dumpster oozing under the door, along with the stench from the cans of cat food he devoured when he could find nothing else to eat, turning horse flesh into his flesh, only to wind up here, shrunken, desperate, and searching out our faces for sympathy he did not, would not give when he stood on this side of the looking glass all those years ago.


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Thursday, December 6, 2018

Lights








 At three, I stretched out my hand to touch them, small fingers reaching towards a blackness I did not comprehend, thinking it a sparkling curtain throughout which they shimmer, and which I could draw back for a better view, burning my ego if not the tips of fingers when I could not, and enraged when like the myth of Santa Claus, the tooth fairy and the Easter Bunny, I would never reach to where they are, of penetrate their mystery, forever beyond my touch, those jewels more valuable than diamonds, and more mysterious than God.




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Saturday, December 1, 2018

Pearls among the ruins






   
She writes her name in sand dunes
As if expecting them to survive
Her gaze showing the pain
When the wave wipes away
Each letter, one piece at a time,
Her lips blue from cold
And determination
As if breathing in the blue
Of the vivid sea shore sky
that frames her face,
rewriting what was already written
to have it wash away again,
she, humming some old tune
in three-quarter beat
as the wind whips her hair
around her head
strands looking as white
as the surf that rolls
up to her feet,
ageless and yet in her eyes
a sense of lost time,
as she seeks to find immorality
between the broken sea shells
at the evaporating foam,
She, searching for peals
Among the ruins
sea gulls screeching over head
pursing the practical
feeding off the less fortunate
they find washing to shore,
And with a wave of her hands
She feeds them,
Even as her name fades,
Hoping they at least
Might remember her
Later.
         


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In the midst of madness





The blizzard comes after you go,
Snarling out of the haze
Its full teeth exposed,
Its claws scraping at my skin
As its paws pound my back
As I follow the downtown track
White flakes erasing all signs
Of this 20th Century
In which I live,
Leaving me with the brick faces
Of previous century
To mock my passage
Grinning with the satisfaction
Of my grandfather’s time
And those tall tales he told
Of making his way
Through storms such as these,
Bare fingers gripping
The handle of his tool box,
His ghostly voice
Howling with laughter
At my pale attempt
To follow in his fading footprints
His face shrouded by the snow
My prints fading equally
Behind me for someone
I have not sired to follow,
Each of us mistakenly believing
We leave an indelible mark,
Just as his father believed
And his father’s father
Did before him,
Me hearing the spirited
Voice of the dying horse
My grandfather’s father
Punched because it dared
Bite my great-grandmother,
I even hear the fall of the ax
That he made his children swing
When coal ran out
And during a storm like this
He sent them to the river
To chop down trees,
My mission less noble,
No horse to avenge
To fuel to keep warm
A family,
But shadow of your face
Somewhere behind this pale
Wall of flakes,
And the need to reach you
In that uptown place
Where you wait,
The way my grandmother waited
For my grandfather to come,
The way all women wait
For men like me
To make it through
Storms like these,
Struggling to follow
A trail that fades
With each slippery step,
The vicious claws of winter
More than the bears
My great great grandfather
Claims to have faced,
The beasts I see
Peering from between the fakes
Are those I imagine,
Self-created,
In this frozen waste
I call a life,
Each step a journey
Through the past
Through the future
Through a storm
I never meant to stumble
Through
No more than my grandfather did
Or all the fathers before him,
Finding ourselves
In the midst of madness
Until we find
Someone like you
In the end.