Poem of the Week, by Dan Bellm

Many years ago I used to teach creative writing workshops at the Minnesota AIDS Project. One of the writers was a man named Kirk. His eyes were dark blue and his face, like his personality, was calm and reserved except for one day, in the midst of discussing a play, he half-rose from his chair and leaned forward and acted out a few lines from a scene. It was an instantaneous change from contained and quiet to blazing; the air around him was electrified. (I later found out that he had spent his career working in theater.) Kirk’s writing, like everything else about him, was precise, psychologically acute and unforgettable. I still remember the first piece he wrote for our class, a brief memoir about growing up, washing the dishes with his mother and aunts and female cousins after a family dinner, knowing that the kitchen, with the women, was where he was most at home. “This is where I belong.” Kirk is gone now, but I think about him often, and lines of his beautiful writing float around in my head. I’m pretty sure he would have loved this poem.

 

Twilight
– Dan Bellm

After the men had
eaten, as always, very
fast, and gone—I thought

of them that way, my
father and brother—the men—
not counting myself

as of their kind—the
time became our own, for talks,
for confidences—

I was one of her,
though I could never be, a
deserter in an

open field between
two camps. Even my high school
said on its billboard,

Give us a boy, and
get back a man
, a wager
that allowed for no

exceptions, like an
article of war. Gay child
years away from that

lonely evening of
coming out to her at last,
of telling her what

she knew already
and had waited for, I’d sit
in the kitchen with

her after clearing
the meal away, our hands all
but touching, letting

a little peace fall
around us for the evening,
coffee steaming in

two cups, and try at
ways of being grown, with her
as witness, telling

the truth as I could—
which is how, one night, that room
became a minor,

historically
unrecorded battleground
of the Vietnam

War. I think she knew
before it began how she’d
be left standing in

the middle with her
improvised white flag, mother,
peacemaker, when I

said I refused to
go; never mind how, I’d thought
her very presence,

her mysterious
calm, would neutralize any
opposing force, draft

board, father—it’s not,
we know, how that war came to
pass. For years I’d still

call her at that hour,
the work done and the darkness
coming on, even

all those years when Dad
was the one who’d come to the
phone first, and then not

speak to me. Twilight
times with her, when a secret
or what I thought was

one could fall away
beneath her patient regard,
though I would never

manage to heal her
hurts the way she tended mine—
those crossings-over

to evening when the
in-between of every kind
seemed possible, and

doubt came clear, because
she heard, and understood, and
did not turn away.


​For more information on Dan Bellm, please click here: http://www.danbellm.com/

Poem of the Week, by Jill Bialosky

Once, maybe ten years ago, I was lugging a heavy bag of groceries home from the store. I turned the corner on my block to see a bunch of high school boys at the other end walking toward me with that easy slouchy not-in-a-hurry grace of teenagers. One of them was tall and rangy and there was something about the way he walked that I admired and I looked at him and thought, geeze, he would be just the type I would’ve had a crush on in high school, the type who never would have noticed me. As we got closer he raised his hand and said, “Hey Mom,” and I realized it was my son. Not sure why this poem makes me think of that day, that wonder and confusion and almost embarrassment, but it does.

 Daylight Savings
– Jill Bialosky

There was the hour
when raging with fever
they thrashed. The hour
when they called out in fright.
The hour when they fell asleep
against our bodies, the hour
when without us they might die.
The hour before school
and the hour after.
The hour when we buttered their toast
and made them meals
from the four important food groups—
what else could we do to insure they’d get strong and grow?
There was the hour where we were the spectators
at a recital, baseball game,
when they debuted in the school play.
There was the silent hour in the car
when they were angry. The hour
when they broke curfew. The hour
when we waited for the turn of the lock
knowing they were safe and we could finally
close our eyes and sleep. The hour
when they were hurt
or betrayed and there was nothing we could do
to ease the pain.
There was the hour
when we stood by their bedsides with ginger-ale
or juice until the fever broke. The hour
when we lost our temper and the hour
we were filled with regret. The hour
when we slapped their cheeks and held
our hand in wonder.
The hour when we wished for more.
The hour when their tall and strong bodies,
their newly formed curves and angles in their faces
and Adam’s apple surprised us—
who had they become?
Hours when we waited and waited.
When we rushed home from the office
or sat in their teacher’s classroom
awaiting the report of where they stumbled
and where they excelled, the hours
when they were without us, the precious hour
we did not want to lose each year
even if it meant another hour of daylight.

 

For more information on Jill Bialosky, please click here.

Poem of the Week, by V. Penelope Pelizzon

Every week in my classes we do a ten-minute write, any one of a bunch I’ve stored away over the years, e.g,. “Think of a powerful figure from your childhood, someone you haven’t seen since. Write about that person.” So often it’s a teacher who is the powerful figure, and there are many times we sit in respectful silence as the writer reads aloud through tears, sometimes of anger but mostly of gratitude and love. What students might not know is that it works the other way, too. Sometimes, when things feel impossible, I’ve stood outside the classroom thinking I had nothing left, no way could I go through that door and teach. But in I go anyway. And all it takes is one line or one look from one student to restore me to myself. The art of writing is a sacred one, and so is the act of teaching.

 

To Certain Students
–  V. Penelope Pelizzon

On all the days I shut my door to light,
all the nights I turned my mind from sleep

while snow fell, filling the space between the trees
till dawn ran its iron needle through the east,

in order to read the scribblings of your compeers,
illiterate to what Martian sense they made

and mourning my marginalia’s failure to move them,
you were what drew me from stupor at the new day’s bell.

You with your pink hair and broken heart.
You with your knived smile. You who tried to quit

pre-law for poetry (“my parents will kill me”).
You the philosopher king. You who saw Orpheus

alone at the bar and got him to follow you home. You
green things, whose songs could move the oldest tree to tears.

 

For more information on V. Penelope Pelizzon, please click here.

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Poem of the Week, by ee cummings

I’ve always loved this amazing poet, from way back when I was a kid and I thought that all the weirdness of punctuation and lower-casing must be a typesetting mistake, and now I love this poet even more, for the way his love poems can be about romance and sex and remember-me-when-I’m-gone, and how in this particular one, love is a place and yes is a world. I also love ee cummings because I believe he would have no problem with me using the word “love” four times in that last sentence. Happy Valentine’s Day, all.

 

love is a place
– ee cummings

love is a place
& through this place of
love move
(with brightness of peace)
all places

yes is a world
& in this world of
yes live
(skillfully curled)
all worlds

 

For more information on ee cummings, please click here.

Poem of the Week, by Jeredith Merrin

One of my sisters once said, about something she was trying to get past in her life, “If you don’t get over it, then. . . you don’t get over it. That’s your punishment.” That line has always stayed with me, because it’s true. Don’t forgive someone for something, live in bitterness. Shun love because someone hurt you, live with a stingy heart. In the end, you punish yourself. This poem, and the beautiful Rilke poem that inspired it, makes me remember what my sister said, and the sound of her voice when she said it.

 

Late Harvest
(after Rilke’s “Herbsttag”)
– Jeredith Merrin

Time, it is time.
Summer has been
long-stretched-out, full.
Go ahead, Fall:
shrink down the days
and sugar the grapes
for late-harvest wine.

Anyone still unknown
to herself will stay,
probably, that way.
Anyone unlinked by love
will be love-
left out now—waking,
mind-pacing
up and down
up and down,
restless as leaf-bits
and papers in the street.

 

For more information on Jeredith Merrin, please click here.

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Poem of the Week, by Saeed Jones

I don’t know exactly what it is about this poem that haunts me, but I keep coming back to it. It might be a bunch of things – the Skoal-tin ring in the back pocket and the work-calloused hands that make me think of a lot of boys I grew up with, the fact that I love whiskey and bourbon, the way the self-hatred in it makes me sad and tired and thinking of a line from Mary Oliver that goes You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves, and how hard that is for so many people.

 

Body & Kentucky Bourbon
– Saeed Jones

In the dark, my mind’s night, I go back
to your work-calloused hands, your body

and the memory of fields I no longer see.
Cheek wad of chew tobacco,

Skoal-tin ring in the back pocket
of threadbare jeans, knees

worn through entirely. How to name you:
farmhand, Kentucky boy, lover.

The one who taught me to bear
the back-throat burn of bourbon.

Straight, no chaser, a joke in our bed,
but I stopped laughing; all those empty bottles,

kitchen counters covered with beer cans
and broken glasses. To realize you drank

so you could face me the morning after,
the only way to choke down rage at the body

sleeping beside you. What did I know
of your father’s backhand or the pine casket

he threatened to put you in? Only now,
miles and years away, do I wince at the jokes:

white trash, farmer’s tan, good ole boy.
And now, alone, I see your face

at the bottom of my shot glass
before my own comes through.

 

For more information on Saeed Jones, please click here.

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Poem of the Week, by Naomi Shihab Nye

Naomi Shihab Nye’s poem “Kindness” seared itself into my brain the first time I read it. She’s another of those poets to me, one whose name I google to see if she’s got another poem out there, one that I haven’t ever read before, let alone memorized. This particular poem makes me feel as if she’s with me throughout the day, happy in the same way, that feeling of secret love when the boiling water begins its steeping of the grounds, or the sheets and blankets are shaken out over the bed, or the sun slanting through the window makes soap bubble rainbows in the sink.

 

Daily
– Naomi Shihab Nye

These shriveled seeds we plant,
corn kernel, dried bean,
poke into loosened soil,
cover over with measured fingertips
These T-shirts we fold into
perfect white squares
These tortillas we slice and fry to crisp strips
This rich egg scrambled in a gray clay bowl
This bed whose covers I straighten
smoothing edges till blue quilt fits brown blanket
and nothing hangs out
This envelope I address
so the name balances like a cloud
in the center of sky
This page I type and retype
This table I dust till the scarred wood shines
This bundle of clothes I wash and hang and wash again
like flags we share, a country so close
no one needs to name it
The days are nouns: touch them
The hands are churches that worship the world.

​For more information on Naomi Shihab Nye, please click here.

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Poem of the Week, by Lianne Spidel

When I was little I read a novel called “A Lantern in Her Hand,” by Bess Streeter Aldrich. It was about a pioneer woman, surprise surprise (you wouldn’t think that there could be all that many pioneer woman books, but take it from me, there are) who homesteaded on the plains. The husband in that book has stayed with me lo these many years. His name was Will and he was so kind (and goodlooking). This book was one of my favorites ever, and my mother cried when I described the ending of it to her, in which the long-dead Will came walking back across a field. This lovely poem brought that whole book right back to me: the small worn paperback copy I had, the picture on the front cover, the scent of cut grass (I must have read it in summer), the love that man had for his wife.

Snowfall at Solstice
– Lianne Spidel

I wonder if this might be the night
when you decide to go, with snow
stippling the screen of your small window
and you snug in your chair, wound
in an afghan, full of shepherd’s
pie and the sugar cookie dunked for you

in tea. You are at peace. Listening, you
feel the soundless weight of this night,
starless, without sentinel or shepherd,
as heaven comes down to earth in snow
to level each crevice, seal each wound,
fill the cup of space outside your window.

The courtyard framed in the window
is all that remains of the world you
knew, a place where whiteness has wound
the tree with garlands heavy as night,
where there is no respite from snow,
no landmark to be seen by shepherds.

In young years, friends—winter shepherds
and maids—summoned you from any window
when the sky threw itself blue over snow,
over the ice of the Rideau. With them, you
learned ski trails curving into night
up the Gatineau, and every path wound

its way through some adventure, wound
magically toward one who would shepherd
you through cities on starless nights,
whose homecoming you awaited at windows,
who carried your furred boots for you
through seventy winters of snow.

He will find his way in winging snow,
white-haired, a woolen scarf wound
at his neck, coming from darkness to you
stooped but sure-footed as a shepherd,
an overcoated angel reflected in the window,
stamping from his shoes the snow, the night.

When you choose, take the shepherd’s arm, leave
the narrow window, walk safe with him by night
out where all stars are wound in snow.

 

For more information on Lianne Spidel, please click here.

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Poem of the Week, by Jacqueline Osherow

​When I first saw this poem I almost didn’t read it due to its extreme length. (One of my friends has a “will not pay to watch” actors list; my semi-equivalent is the “super-long or too-freaky-looking-or-full-of-itself-in-my-instant-opinion poems list.) But the first stanza sucked me in with its reference to memory, and walls alive with light, and then I kept going all through the effortless length. It felt familiar to me in so many ways – the nature of memory, the unconquerability of childhood impressions, “all that captured, concentrated light.”

Penn Station: Fifty Years Gone
– Jacqueline Osherow

There must have been a train, a subway ride,
but what I remember is the palace
in between: its high glass walls alive with light

and so enticing I thought closed-in space
more open, even, than open air,
light the only presence in the concourse,

though I must have seen throngs of women there.
Wednesday was Ladies’ Day on the Pennsyl-
vania Railroad; women paid half fare

(a practice eventually declared illegal).
I was three or four and rode for free,
my unlucky sister stuck in school.

We did this often, my mother tells me—
Philly to Brooklyn in time for lunch—
and then the island on Eastern Parkway

where she sat with her mother on a bench
while I hopped from hexagon to hexagon,
examining the sidewalk, inch by inch,

for the secret of this new, compelling pattern
(molecule to petaled flower to star),
the quintessential feature of Brooklyn,

tightly fitted shapes nuzzling together
from Parkway pavement to bathroom floor.
Or did my notice of such things come after?

When we’d get there, as a family, by car,
the halfway mark in the Holland Tunnel
(whoever saw it first—always my sister—

awarded a nickel) arrival’s sentinel,
next Liberty from the Manhattan Bridge.
But even she—torch and all—could not annul

that more and more impossible assemblage
of wrought iron, granite, glass, and light
that gave me something of a sense of pilgrimage

a decade later in a window seat
on Amtrak, heading to a camp reunion.
My friends and I had arranged to meet

at the clock? information booth? in Penn Station,
then ride together to Valley Stream …
I’d be face-to-face with stored-up vision

(how much was memory? how much was dream?)
what for years conspired in me to nurture
the sort of intimate, fanatic claim

we make as children on what we adore
and though I didn’t know the terminology
my platonic ideal of architecture,

unaltered, really, to this very day:
openness corralled and sealed with light.
But on that day in autumn 1970,

I got off the train to find concrete
and crowds and trash and ugliness and smell.
I assumed that in the interim they’d built

a slapdash addition to my beautiful
(perhaps too good to use?) remembered space,
found my friends and convinced them all

to join—did we miss a train?—my wild-goose chase
until finally we asked a policeman,
who told us this was all there was

when we asked for the “main part” of Penn Station.
Perhaps I was thinking of Grand Central?
an easy subway ride, just go down

that stairway, ride one stop then take the shuttle …
But it was late; we had to reach Long Island
before the Sabbath (we were under the spell

of Jewish summer camp) so I abandoned
one dream for another. Adolescents
are flexible that way. And our weekend—

hectic and euphoric and intense—
turned my confusion at Penn Station
into a funny story, its disappointments

postponed for our reunion’s brief duration.
But on my train ride home, an acrid taste
pervaded everything: my initiation

into the recalcitrant mistrust
with which a bossy, noncompliant present
infiltrates and redesigns the past.

Still, I was, after all, an adolescent;
I had a world to change, a war to end,
and though I knew my vision wasn’t

of any other station, I abandoned
my newly defenseless memory—
though I would have liked to understand

where it had come from; perhaps TV?
But my childhood TV was black and white
and I could see pink stone against a shimmery

golden-yellow amplitude of light
extending in every known direction …
Only years later, as an undergraduate,

when the fate of Grand Central Station—
thanks to Jackie O’s gift for publicity—
became a topic of dinner conversation,

did I finally unravel my old mystery.
Jackie’s war cry was the demolition
of Penn Station in nineteen sixty-three!

I grabbed someone’s paper, in which Penn Station
was described as “great,” noble,” a “masterpiece,”
half-thrilled by this belated confirmation,

half-shamed at having betrayed my memories.
That light-struck little girl had not been wrong,
she and I the unsuspecting repositories

of the world’s lost treasure—all along
(there’s no overstating the world’s recklessness
with what’s irreplaceable) in our safekeeping—

and—or so it seemed—nowhere else.
Still, it was, at best, a Pyrrhic victory,
since there’d be no returning to my palace,

though I did have sightings: an illusory
thirty-five-millimeter meteor
flashing by me in The Palm Beach Story

(in those days, we saw movies in the theatre),
The Seven Year Itch, Strangers on a Train.
And then, a real find, outside a bookstore

in the used-books rack? remainders’ bin?
among the pages of photos in a cast-
off coffee-table book of old Manhattan:

wrought iron, stone and glass, possessed
by something more like sorcery than sun,
an image I suspect has long replaced

or perhaps just merged with? my childhood vision,
Berenice Abbott: Penn Station Interior.
Take a look, reader, it’s online.

(Perhaps I should have told you this before?)
You can even buy a print: an aura magical
enough to turn a person, even at four—

especially at four?—elegiacal
for at least another half century—
which explains the, for me, irresistible

allure of train stations—call it my history—
the more gargantuan and whimsical,
over the top, absurd, unnecessary

the more I love them: Antwerpen-Centraal
(Sebald’s Austerlitz), Milan, St. Pancras …
Forgive me, but, for all its grace, Grand Central

doesn’t have the lushness to redress
what turns out to be my great childhood loss.
The place—after all—is steeped in darkness:

too much travertine, too little glass.
And yet, reader, I still thrill to go there,
famished as I am for any trace

of the notion that arrival or departure—
anyone’s at all—is apt occasion
for unstinting outpourings of grandeur.

And there it is, reader—it’s not Penn Station:
Interior by Berenice Abbott I see
but an entire universe’s concentration

on the daunting task of welcoming me—
Jackie!—after my first ride on a train,
which—oh how memory breeds memory—

must have had a caboose, a little red one—
like the one in the story in the Golden Book
my mother surely read me on that train

(she made it an adventure to be stuck
at a railway crossing: the caboose! look!).
For a minute, I imagine she walked me back

to see the caboose on our train in New York—
but only freight trains had cabooses; wrong again.
Oh reader, forgive me, the nostalgic

wasn’t my intended destination
but what can I do? I’ve been derailed.
I wanted to tell you about Penn Station—

so magical a place even a child
would claim it as her private, secret palace—
how I once inhabited a world

so benevolent, its public space
seemed to cherish every human being.
I honestly haven’t thought of that caboose

for nearly fifty years (it wasn’t among
the Golden Books I read to my own children;
perhaps they didn’t reprint it?). I wasn’t expecting

to be blindsided by my mother all of a sudden,
but she had a way of singling out
anything she thought might give her children

even a brief instant of delight,
must have reveled in my private store of marvels,
though I was sure I kept them secret.

She’d present the simplest things as miracles
(not that she could have known they’d turn elusive).
Have I managed to do that for my girls?

What will they half recall, half try to prove
in fifty years? With what tenacious
if hazy spectacle they’ve caught a glimpse of

(one I likely see as commonplace)
will I—or, rather, my memory—be entwined?
Just let it be wide-open and gratuitous,

evocative of something like the kind
of—what shall I call it?—solicitude?
that made me think the world had been designed

with only me in mind, my childhood
a string of wonders. With each fresh thing—
a stray leaf clinging to a piece of fruit,

a twin yolk in an egg, a cardinal idling
in our neighbor’s birdbath: my mother’s voice,
so urgent and excited we’d come running.

Back from the laundry, a pillow case
with a tiny Chinese character inside its hem
was bounty from an over-brimming universe

with a prize (Cracker Jack writ large) in every item.
No doubt it was she who pointed out
the way Penn Station’s granite walls would gleam

in all that captured, concentrated light,
the roof of windows letting in the sky’s
wide-open pathways, the infinite

just one among a host of possibilities
in a world so enthralling, so magnanimous
all you had to do was open your eyes

and you’d be swept up in a fast embrace
of deft if momentary harmonies,
an eleventh-hour glimpse of iron, stone, and glass,
an ultimatum from paradise.


For more information on Jacqueline Osherow, please click here: http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/jacqueline-osherow

For those of you interested in poetic form, this poem is written in terza rima, a series of three-line stanzas with a (very loose, in this example) aba, bcb rhyme scheme.

My blog: alisonmcghee.com/blog

My Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/pages/Alison-McGhee/119862491361265?ref=ts

Poem of the Week, by Suzanne Cleary

Yesterday I wrapped gifts and hit Play over and over on a youtube recording of my niece’s choral group singing a capella. I clapped for a six year old friend who had been instructed by his piano teacher to play Jingle Bells (for someone besides his parents) in preparation for his recital today. I read this poem and dug out my old tape –yes, tape– of the Messiah so I could listen to it, but I had nothing to listen to it on, so I youtubed it instead. Then I read this poem and was, for no reason that makes sense, transported back to 8th grade All-County choir, where I stood on the back riser (always the tall girl) of an unfamiliar bleacher in an unfamiliar school, practicing Amazing Grace over and over with no one I knew, the smell of May sun and spring wind and cotton and empty-school-on-a-weekend rising all around us.

Glory
– Suzanne Cleary

My husband and his first wife once sang Handel’s Messiah
at Carnegie Hall, with 300 others who also had read
the ad for the sing-along, and this is why I know
the word glory is not sung by the chorus,
although that is what we hear.
In fact, the choir sings glaw-dee, glaw-dee
while it seems that glory unfurls there, like glory itself.
My husband sings for me. My husband tells me they practiced
for an hour, led by a short man with glasses,
a man who made them sing glory, twice, so they could hear it
fold back upon itself, swallow itself
in so many mouths, in the grand hall.
Then he taught them glaw-dee, a distortion that creates the right effect,
like Michelangelo distorting the arms of both God and Adam
so their fingertips can touch.
My husband and his first wife and 300 others performed
at 5 o’clock, the Saturday before Christmas,
for a small audience of their own heavy coats,
for a few ushers arrived early, leaning on lobby doors.
But mostly they sang for themselves,
for it is a joy to feel song made of the body’s hollows.
I do not know if their marriage, this day, was still good
or whether it seemed again good
as they sang. I prefer to think of the choral conductor,
who sang with them. He sang all the parts, for love
not glory, or what seemed to be
glory to those who wandered in
and stood at the back of the hall, and listened.

 

– For more information on Suzanne Cleary, please click here.

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