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Poems from in between

Poems from in between

by Jenifer Cartland


  • December 10, 2014

    The city breathes

    We walk in a world
    muffled with blue-white
    snow piled high. A single
    shadowy path guides us.

    Our boots crunch, blunted
    echoes in the distance —
    a car horn, shovel,
    train crossing, dog bark —

    the light of smudged stars
    tap through a black,
    hazy sky, asking permission
    to appear and speak.

    The city takes in one
    deep, filling breath
    and lets out one
    long, gentle sigh.

    And in that respite
    from its patient labor,
    it unfolds before us
    its whispered truths.

    ——————————-
    A response to today’s dVerse prompt City Songs for Poetics, http://dversepoets.com/2014/12/09/city-songs-for-poetics-2/. Post you poem and join the conversation.

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  • December 8, 2014

    Another poem about a rose

    It hangs there still
    in the cold December air
    having bloomed late,
    and now unable to set seed.

    I had thought it
    a thing of hope
    when it first bloomed,
    white, stubborn.

    The dog does not follow me
    downstairs at this hour,
    her joints sore,
    orientation off.

    Alone in the gray night,
    uncertain in the ordering
    of things, and more things,
    their pacing.

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  • December 3, 2014

    Book of changes, ii

    The after-silence opened early that December morning (sometimes it comes as a surprise and sometimes expected, they say).

    We stepped into it on your last gasp (ready or not, dreaming or not)

    and as you were dropped into the ground (the splash of water, the frosty breath).

    We stood shaped (sent forth, novel, unprotected, planned, ventured, naked),

    of your own making (and of our own, I must admit, forever set to disappoint and astonish).

    I give birth to you in turn (from our ruddy beginning, playing out in an ever-widening spiral)

    and offer up a noise not yet silenced.

    ——————
    In remembrance of my mother’s death, ten years ago this month. This poem continues a poetic conversation with Jennifer Knoblock (https://gracefulpress.wordpress.com/2014/11/28/saving-the-innocents-a-fragment/). Please visit her blog and enjoy her wonderful words.

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  • November 29, 2014

    City river

    How its surface hides
    the undulation on its bottom;
    how its edges spill over
    and are spilled over into.

    How as it is fed by another,
    the water tumbles, turns
    over broken concrete slabs;
    how herons perch there, oblivious.

    How when the tunnel overflows
    with rain, it releases a stench
    into the summer breeze
    that makes you turn away.

    How the beaver plays under graffiti
    refreshed the night before.

    How my son found a raft
    in a strip of woods on the bank;
    how he hid there with his friends,
    stoking rebellion in the wild.

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  • November 24, 2014

    A rose on the first day of winter

    Still deep pink, regardless
    of the snow settled between its petals.
    I ask you how will your innocence hold up,
    how will I know when the time has come,
    when your infant skin is layered over
    with that tougher husk?

    Last night, I imagined you old,
    like all the lonely old men
    pacing the streets day on day.
    I wondered hard, trying to know
    you will not hurt as I do not,
    pacing the streets.

    Will your eyes still be blue?
    If I were to appear back from the dead,
    would they still pierce me,
    the way they did when I glanced back
    at you in your car seat that time —
    rose-fresh love?

    —————————-
    Inspired by Jennifer Knoblock’s poignant To Keep the Lanterns Lit Tonight.

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  • November 11, 2014

    Book of changes, i

    The sun was bright today,
    but not enough to keep
    the lanterns lit tonight.
    Bare tree branches in tangled
    knots streak the black blue sky,
    scraping the air as they sway.

    If I had thought to prepare,
    it would not strike so hard
    that we will spend months waiting
    for a new set of leaves to insulate,
    hold, relieve. Here we are, again,
    at the stark beginning.

    There is a way seasons change
    when we find no mercy buried
    in six months of cold on a naked hill,
    in a faraway country, the only warmth
    being what you can protect
    in your own mind.

    Yet here we sit and wait,
    so many years since, having by now
    felt all different sorts of cold,
    all bleak in their own ways, all things
    of survival, building one on another,
    opening to the vast wind.

    ———————————————-
    For my father on Veterans Day

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