Monday, August 29, 2011

Easy Pickings

Sometimes things come too easily.

       Easy Pickings

Turtles, quicker than their reputation,
proved elusive in that summer lake,
swiftly sliding from their sun spots
when I rowed closer to capture them
or flash diving deep when I turned
to catch them catching their breath –
leaving only a bubble trail behind.

But in the muddy creek that fed that lake,
they turned half-ostrich, confident they were
hidden when they could no longer see.
I gathered them, still as stones – 1, 2, 3.
By the third one, turtles had lost their charm,
and my mind turned to slippery frogs,
leaping, leaping just beyond my reach.



Monday, August 22, 2011

The Susquehanna: Something Short of a Sonnet

During my childhood, I spent many summer vacations at my grandfather's cottage on this river- the longest non-navigable river in the U.S.

             The Susquehanna: Something Short of a Sonnet.
                                                        
                                                          the Algonkian name, Susquehanna,
                                                          has been interpreted to mean “Long, Winding
                                                          River.”
                                                                    Susquehanna River Basin Commission
The river widens as it seeks the sea
gaining breadth but losing identity,
its Long Winding buried in a bay.
The Chesapeake is cherished, or so
the license plates say, while its birth
waters are forgot. That which cannot
be sailed is seldom romanticized.
That which cannot support commerce
can only be dammed with faint praise:
its poisons are not of its own making
but flow from the crops that feed us all;
its rushing power was ripe for the taking-
its muddy waters now part mirror, part wall.





Monday, August 15, 2011

Pot Luck

        Pot Luck

It’s one of those nights when
neighbors wander the suburban streets
carrying casseroles and salad bowls
and store bought pies – like random
wise men bearing different dishes
and following separate stars:
some bringing their family
favorite, some trying something
new, others unloading the unwanted
in the name of economy.
With luck, such a lottery will
produce a solid meal; without it,
rows on rows of insubstantial
jell-o molds. So much depends upon
what we all bring to the table.



Monday, August 8, 2011

The Parable of the Man Cave

Heard Plato's parable of the cave mentioned somewhere I ended up thinking of the modern idea of a man cave, a place where males can retreat, watch sports, drink, and fantasize. 

            The Parable of the Man Cave

Is this what Plato had in mind:
the darkened den where plasma
shadows play upon widescreen walls,
reflecting someone’s idea of perfect
form from which the recliner cannot
turn away? Did that ancient Greek
ever picture such buoyant breasts,
imagine beer that never slurs
speech or dulls the brain
since it is never consumed on
camera, or conceive of reality
shows that defy our highest definition?

Monday, August 1, 2011

Pas de Deux

Something has always struck me as slightly odd about these supposed love duets of dance, especially the traditional ones in which the partners take turns alone on stage and stop for applause and bows.

             Pas de Deux

The ballerina’s beauty comes first,
her partner content to present,
admire, support – pointing toward her
as if she were a game show prize,
offering her a hand in her arabesque,
spinning her slender waist as she
turns, lifting her with as little
apparent effort as possible
so she seems weightless -  
like grace and form and motion.

Then comes the competition
as each takes the stage alone,
supposedly showing off to impress
their absent lover, but actually
trying to outdo each other
and win the audience’s heart:
he, leaping like he’s on another
smaller planet; she, spinning beyond
dizziness until they force
the crowd to clap and are loved
enough to come together again
for a final swirl and pose
and one too many bows
in the fading light.