Poem of the Week, by Tim Seibles

Click here to see the beautiful cover, read an excerpt, and find out more about my new novel Telephone of the Tree, officially in the world on May 7. 

These days I keep looking at a photo of a friend’s baby lying on a blanket as his father reads Chicka Chicka Boom Boom to him. The baby is tiny, and the expression on his face is pure wonder. Astonishment. Happiness. As if the book and his father and the words and the blanket and the world, the whole entire world, this same world that most of us later learn to walk through with our guard up, are just one big delight.

Naïve, by Tim Seibles

               I love you but I don’t know you (Mennonite Woman)

When I was seven, I walked home
with Dereck DeLarge, my arm 

slung over his skinny shoulders,
after-school sun buffing our lunch boxes.

So easy, that gesture, so light— 
the kind of love that lands like a leaf.

It was 1963.  
We were two black boys

whose snaggle-toothed grins 
held a thousand giggles.

Remember? Remember
wanting to play

every minute, as if that
was why we were born?

Those hands that bring us
shouting into this life

must open like a fanfare 
of big band horns.

Though this world is nothing

like where we’d been, 
we come anyway, astonished

as if to Mardi Gras in full swing.
There must be a time

when a child’s heart builds 
a chocolate sunflower

while katydids burnish the day
with their busy wings.

This itching fury that 
holds me now—this knowing

the early welcome
that once lived inside me

was somehow sent away:
how I talk myself back

into all the regular disguises
but still walk these streets

believing in the weather
of the unruined heart.

My friends, with crow’s feet
edging their eyes,

keep looking for a kinder
city, though they don’t

want to seem naïve.
When was the last time

you wrapped your arm
around someone’s shoulder

and walked him home?

Click here for more information about Tim Seibles. “Naive” was first published on the American Academy of Poet’s Poem-a-Day site in 2024.

alisonmcghee.com
My podcast: Words by Winter

Poem (excerpt) of the Week, by Tim Seibles

Lots of old photos have been passing around my family these days, some I don’t remember ever being taken, except there I am: a laughing baby, a smiling teen, a young woman making funny faces at her babies, most recently a middle-aged woman in a pink sweatshirt crouched next to her dad, both smiling up at the photo taker.

Oh my face. You’ve been with me through every moment of my life, never questioning any feeling or how to express it. Immediately and by instinct you pull yourself into smiles, tears, laughter, anger, excitement. The older I get the more I appreciate you and all we have been through together, and the fact that no matter how you change, you are the face that everyone who loves me loves.

(Excerpt from) Ode to My Hands, by Tim Seibles

Five-legged pocket spiders, knuckled
starfish, grabbers of forks, why
do I forget that you love me:
your willingness to button my shirts,
tie my shoes—even scratch my head!
which throbs like a traffic jam, each thought
leaning on its horn. I see you

waiting anyplace always
at the ends of my arms—for the doctor,
for the movie to begin, for
freedom—so silent, such
patience! testing the world
with your bold myopia: faithful,
ready to reach out at my
softest suggestion, to fly up
like two birds when I speak, two
brown thrashers brandishing verbs
like twigs in your beaks, lifting
my speech the way pepper springs
the tongue from slumber.

Click here for details and to register for our new Write Together session in early June. 

Click here for more information about Tim Seibles.​

alisonmcghee.comMy podcast: Words by Winter