Sunday, December 15, 2019

A Different Kind of Narrative

Winter. Outside it’s beautiful, a dusting of snow & intense, subtle colors of December sky at twilight. Inside, a much different time for us this year. Thirteen months ago we didn’t know if P would even have an eye. He does. It’s not the color of his beautiful biologically gifted green, but it’s beautiful. He doesn’t see, but he retains the glory of color, shadow & space, tho reorganized in the uniqueness of his condition. There is no end in *sight* yet, but we’ve learned about how one sees what is really there, what doesn’t matter, & what, perhaps, shouldn’t be seen. A few weeks ago a huge wind brought down some large branches from one of our towering firs. I’ve been taking cuttings from the felled limb, bringing them inside, to serve for a bit longer, alive, still pungent. I started thinking about my dad, who was never bewitched by glorious little white lights, no matter the coaxing of our mother, & in fact the Christmas he died my sister & I put up a tree for him outside on the upstairs porch off his room, & we dressed it with colored lights. Tonight I adorned the kitchen mantle with greens from the felled fir, & colored lights, for you, Dad. And now, here our little tree, undecorated with the ornaments I love, the baubles & handmade things the children made, the nostalgic things that connect us back in time to memory & tradition & all that. Last year a tree was out of the question, but one dreadful night returning from Syracuse, filled with fears, prayers, all the things that bind trouble to reality, as I came down our road & took the turn by the creek where one glimpses the back of our house, I saw - behold - the twinkling white lights of a Christmas tree. Sarah & Robert came in, & in addition to taking care of mister Colby, birdie, & BillyBob our funny little goat all this terrible time, they knew we should have a tree. I burst into tears, & when P saw it, he burst into tears as well. So now we have a Christmas tree, beautiful in its simplicity and resonant with memory and gratitude, still awaiting the dressing that we cherish. P put the lights on. He said it wasn’t easy, because he saw multiples. Tomorrow I’ll bring all our memories round. I’ll decorate the tree.

Nothing changes. 

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

A World One Night

The women sit around a fire. 
They pull their shawls against the chill
The firelight warms their faces. 
In the near-distance, coyotes
Howl around their prey, 
Yipping dinner,
And overhead, beyond 
The crackle and the pop of fire,
Stars twinkle. 

There is mother, and 
The really old grandmother sits
Her sharp eyes seeing
Clusters of the Milky Way 
Moving through the Cosmos
Infinitesimal silvered dusts, 
Each mote a first breath, each a last
The sister sits with quiet, 
And there are others, they too 
Appear contemplative, staring into 
The ritual and comfort of the golden,
In this case, fire, the golden fire
But often golden sunset
Preceded by those holy
Pinks from the early 
Morning 
East

Digressing back, 
Some of them, the women,
Seem little more 
Than miasma, 
Though all reach for grail forgotten 
As the world veered 
Out of tilts,
The lessons of the grandmothers 
Ignored, discarded beyond memory; 
The price of negligence so dear,
The reckoning assured,
They know they’ll be the ones 
To settle up
On judgment day

They sit around the fire pit
Where the grass won’t grow
In between the gardens around
The barns and the rimming green
That surrounds the weeping formal, 
A garden of tears,
Their own tears 
Salting that patch of ground
Where life no longer thrives
At least for now

They know that love is not enough
Sometimes giving way,
Bending in an agony 
That only time and will can soothe,
And no guarantees at that 

Maybe all they seek
Is the logic of the mystery, 
Answers sparking as they’re calling to 
Ghosts of just what might have been,
What was, or to the whys that linger, 
Pointing deep to the no matters that 
Don’t matter anymore
And therein, truth indwelling 
The alpha and omega
Some things will never change, even 
As they ever grow and flicker
Embers for the coming flames.




Friday, November 8, 2019

Ether

Maybe this is the point of it
Trying to get to the end
Of whatever it is
And on the way find
These memories
Some not easy born
Dissolutions 
Strife and despair 
Memories are,
They are 
What is real,
And when they’re
So sometimes 
Beautiful
When they’re
Mostly 
Steady and forgiving 
Kind and generous
Leavened with compassion
They abide and
That’s the point 
Of it all, 
The ether of the
Truth. 

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

This Day

Cutting hydrangea in the 
Dark of the night sky, 
No light but 
Moonlight
They’re drying into late autumn
And how beautiful they are on the
Eve of my birthday. 
Peter brings me cut flowers 
And then I think
To also cut some holly
Brilliant 
Berries 
Red and disappearing as I turn
This way and that from and 
Into moonlight,
My fingers feeling the rough bark
Making my way to the place
Each stem grows away from
The branch before I clip

Tomorrow when the sky grows light
I’ll harvest more from this 
Bounteous patch of life that we tend, 
That we love, careful to give thanks,
And I might keep clipping, and 
Clipping, cutting and bringing in
Until the whole house is 
Filled with magic 
As the living, once living, 
Drying
Dying 
Take over every space,
Desiccating 
Petal and tendril, 
Still-supple living stem, her leaves
Crawling into the 
Corners and crevices, hooking
Into peeling plaster and uneven 
Floorboards—
Isn’t that the way life goes on,
Everywhere? 
Blooming, growing, surprising, 
Yearning, reaching, praying, balancing,
Accepting, praising and always, if we 
Give in, 
Lifting into light? 




Saturday, October 5, 2019

Harvest Moon

I would like him to
Think, without thinking,
She smells like earth
The scent she always wears

I have all I can handle right now
And it’s powerful,
An Orenda, 
Everything is fine. 

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Love

Washed in an early autumn rain, these 
Tears hot then 
Cold, coursing slick like old sorrows 
Arrowing down my cheeks into the 
Heart of my emotions, 
Flooding my way as I pick through 
What the whole cloth of my
Life feels like,
Rents and all, 
The fabric is stretched and 
Fraying, but it holds

Still, what will never resolve, because
Is doesn’t resolve, settles:
Tacit
Protected and
Preserved,
Honored,
A fine way through, although 
Not easy
I toss and turn the word over and over,
I let it settle, knitting into my
Bones, my
Breath and sinew, 
Tacit. 

Seeking resolution,
Because breath compels, 
Because the heart beats,
Time after time I 
Find I just don’t want anyone else 
And, I don’t want to be anywhere else.  

Here, in some hard-fought 
Fulsomeness, hard-won honesty, which is 
A powerful place to be, 
Scary and demanding,
I slip into a universe of tension 
I won’t relinquish,
Summoning steadiness, for the why of it
I’ll never know,
It just
Is.

Monday, September 2, 2019

It’s Just the Rain

I’ve been fallow, 
Lost in the angers, fears, un-understandables...
The own creative mine of me sleeping, 
Stunted and afraid. 
But as I flipped through a magazine tonight 
With unseeing eyes,
On a page, a rush of words,
Poesy, 
Perhaps reminding me some 
Way to better balance. 
Even a hard rain, though, 
Like in this moment, once
Familiar in the way of comfort
Now frightens me. 
And what is happening is 
Everywhere unimaginable 
Now, 
I do not know what to do 
With this
And so, and
So I will just let it be. 

Wednesday, August 21, 2019

He was a Friend of Mine

Where do you go?
Where do you go when things are
So outside comprehension? 
Maybe I just tend my garden,
Worry about my really old dog, but
He never stopped.
He tended. Thank you Frank.
Tend, actually, that’s all I can do. 
C’est sufficant
RIP and you rise. 

In memoriam Frank LaMere

Monday, August 5, 2019

Chamaecyparis


I sit on the small concrete bench
Under the trumpet vine in the 
Evergreen garden, 
The chamaecyparis 
Bending into my frame, as I look out
Up north into the darkening sky. 
The trumpet vine is old, winding, sinuous 
Old and laden with that 
Coral orangeness about to pop
There are fireflies in this peaceful place
Although there’s 
No way can I capture them.
Suffice it to write
These fireflies winking 
Are the gift in the chaos. 
I snap a photo 
Looking east toward the back of my house
Over the top of the arbor vitae hedge surrounding
This old garden,
It’s flat, no light from my house.
Sometimes it’s a rough passage
Between here and a house unlit,
Or maybe I mean lit,
The toll of the struggle pours into
These last days,
And I’m just determined,
Maybe, no, praying for balance. 
 

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Sometime


I’ve been sitting outside 
Working outside, we have,
But oh Lord, the black flies,
And just now persistent 
This summer. 
The other night I started to think
About unthinkable. 
I’ve been here before. 
When I think about this all
I remember crossing the bar 
In Astoria, with uncle Jack
A bar harbor pilot on the Columbia.
He took us deep sea fishing. 
A wild mile wide, that bar into the ocean.
Once a bit ago
When trying to get my balance 
I thought about crossing the Rubicon.
The shorthand of beautiful languages, oh
Those poets of human passages, 
Their words settle around my shoulders, 
Whispering
Or maybe just the long sounds of night, shhh
Listen now, memory so vivid, and
The further I go with my stories
The more things seem to knit
Together,
And there will most likely
Come a time when the good things
About the old ways rise like a sweet mist
To bring us back, changed and in tact. 

Saturday, July 20, 2019

Orchard

In June 
I promised myself I would figure out
Where to plant more cherry trees
Not weeping cherry, but
Cherry pie cherry trees.
Now I remember what I was thinking about.

When we were little 
We’d pick cherries in the long bright dusk 
In the orchard our mother planted on Nebraska’s windy plains, her sturdy 
Cherry trees, and when we had enough
She baked pies for us

No pink-peach solstice light this year. 
It is strange. It’s beautiful but strange. 
The land is changing. 
It is lush, but somehow a little 
Drier than you might imagine. 

Now and then,
I feel the lightest drops of rain
Sitting outside, 
In this moment, moments perhaps,
The scented life, 
The life of pond, the life of here   
Is balanced
And there are fireflies. 

I have figured out where
I will plant cherry pie cherry trees, 
Far from memory’s 
Plains in gentle twilight, 
Here, in Seneca’s soft hills,
I leave you my orchard. 

July 20, 1969

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Things I Want to Tell You


I didn’t know how 
I needed this,
Outside, 
The three-quarter moon through
Clouds obscuring the Milky Way, moving 
Through the maples along the southwest, 
And looking up through the pergola
Make up enough magic to settle me. 
Bullfrogs and 
A few fireflies,
Colby came outside with me,
Gone out there to his dogness,
He circled back 
And just checked in. 
The patio is close to
Home and edge, and I
Can’t ask for more. 
Tu me manques.

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Pond Night and Chorale

Good Christ
They’re loud, the frogs,
Basso profundo, they set up
A mighty warfare 
At the pond tonight, and 
All the little minions
Too, chiming in,
Brave alto warblings,
Such life everywhere around
Right here, bit of balance,
Eyes close to violet swoon, tho,
Lavender petunias, lifting off into
This sponge-painted sky.

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

Surrounded by Stars

Last evening, after dinner, 
We walked around this living place
We followed the light from the
Setting sun, where now and then 
It haunts
Through some low, brittle 
Evergreen branches 
Aged hardy into 
A sort of frame in a particular 
Spot in the alleé
Back behind the barns.
Anyway, I said
I can’t tramp there right now,
And when she got just past
The burrow, massive roots
Curling mysterious under a ghosted
Long gone tree, and deep
Organic in the slanting-sunset-
Shafted passage demarking, 
For the sake of maps and 
Deeds and so forth, 
The property line’s long double stretch 
Of old firs and pines, 
She paused 
On soft rust needles, 
On mossy scrub, and  
Because it was the twilight hour
The sun just so, and 
Glinting low, I saw its gold
Through that pungent aperture and 
In the dim she rather 
Vanished down the alleé, 
Until she passed by my watching and 
Then as if in slow motion, turned to west, 
To gaze upon
The fields beyond
When of a sudden 
The sun caught the claret ruby red
In her wine glass, perfect axis
Flashing 
Clear and claret, ruby, red
I will not forget that

All is well and good
Here in these sane, 
Giving, gifting pastures
Windbreaks and growing berms
Tonight the palest
Shadow on moon-silvered
Gathering cirrus harkens 
More rain coming soon. 
Tonight we speak of other
Energies and allow as how we
Err to not allow them in.
This night, though, promise, 
Everlasting beauty, and homeostasis.
Some things are simply
Bedrock
Composting into balance, and 
Although nothing is easy now, 
I am clear-eyed, 
Looking through 
The claret of it all. 

Thursday, June 6, 2019

The Great Unknown of This

Big grey cloud stretching 
Across the western sky
Heading north 
Like a huge mammoth of
The deep
I fancy it heading for 
The St Lawrence then
To Terra Nova
Moving swiftly as to remind
That all things change as
They set sail
For better,
For dream,
For home
For new
The sextant sparks the sailor’s way,
And while it all,
Always, leads to 
An end,
How much better it is to know that 
The oft-unsteadied hand
Can reach and dare. 
Nothing is guaranteed 
Sometimes I rail and weep for 
Days and days 
And finally stop.
Relaxing, shrugging into
Calm, and waking into my 
Moonless inner landscape, 
The silver shimmers.
There it all makes sense. 



Saturday, May 18, 2019

Being Here

Sitting tonight outside
On a tattered winter-struck patio
Not yet rescued by broom 
And potted things
I’ve mowed the long hardy grasses, weeds 
Twice now in this long
Recalcitrant spring
I’ve noticed many bluebirds
Fewer robins
And this afternoon spotted
My first little brown toad of the season
Hopping away from the 
Frightening sounds of my mower
And truly, watching, as I carefully turned 
Away from her hideout in
A clump of unruliness around
The smoke bush back by the barn. 

The sun is descending and small grey 
Scattered cumulo stratus nimbus fill the 
Western sky behind the firs that keep
The dust from from Bobby’s plowing from 
My windows, opened
Momentarily to admit spring cleansing before
I close them up
For an unseasonably chilly night

The dip in the back 
Opening amongst long, tall
Stands of spruce and fir,
My alleé I call it there, though just an 
Unkempt magic land of burrows, 
Rotting stuff, rust chuff 
From ancient evergreens
Carpeting a path, well-known 
By generations of animals, and 
Through this window 
Bits of peach and gold from the
Disappearing day cast
A blaze 
Nonpareil 
An instant that 
Beckons belief
My hands are cold and
It’s time for dinner. 

May 18, 2019

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Mother’s Day

The blood can catch up, 
The Hurley stubborn in me
Don’t want to go anywhere
Don’t want to go no mo 
This old fabric of land 
Here rent
With memory 
What we could never know
Except that it comes alive, the
Place just blooms, 
The air, the light and the
Dirt shifting
Thinking to temper obdurate,
Some kind of self taps at 
The wild, taps on the window
Look, see this vastness
Loves seem to bloom
From deep down into those
Sighs, long those shadows, and all 
So beautiful in
The sun

May 7, 2019

Friday, May 3, 2019

Accident

Working on a theory
Borned from some trauma,
Most immediately that of
Accident and bad luck
Becoming as bad as bad dream 
As an unwelcome life of it all
Took root,
Defining
Day, night and all the in-between moments
Of fear, doubt, what now and
So forth. 
The thought occurred to me as 
I took a photo of myself as I do
Most everyday, in perhaps a vain
Moment hoping to capture a small
Shrinking of a scary hematoma on my
Forehead,
And I tried to think of another word 
For it that wouldn’t be so jarring,
But there isn’t one.
I started to think about stepping 
Back and away,
As I more or less have done 
I too fight to save Mother Earth
And the people I love the most are so
Clear in their relentlessness
But I did step back, step away,
I had to, for whatever reason, a 
Near-miss, though perhaps I’ll heal
If I am mindful and do as I am told. 
Talking with a friend who let go
The disillusionment of comraderie
She, bleeding hope and passion and
A justice maybe just beyond,  
She said she had to turn away, for now
Or for how long, actually she didn’t say. 
It’s not just about the struggle
Some of us sometimes
Must turn to face another in another light,
The one that glows in the pit of 
Stomach, heart, essence, 
And so stepping quietly amid
The shards of betrayal and avarice
Dissonance and the flat hollow note 
Of someone else’s torque, 
We leave to find in witness and
Introspection a ground as vibrant
And authentic as any solidarity,
Only solitary

I felt this, briefly swirling in the static,
And with a grateful heart, I 
Vowed to try to share that there
Is power and vital balance when
All is said as best one can before the ring 
Is tossed to stars and hope, holding breath and 
Praying for the unseen hands stretched 
To take it up for a time, knitting the 
Intention into belief that something
Bigger waits for bigger breath.