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Poems from in between

Poems from in between

by Jenifer Cartland


  • May 11, 2014

    The gift

    Somewhere in the silky trill of the early birds
    my memory finds you,
    and in its deep wanderings
    on this foggy morning
    whatever was true and not true
    surfaces in small pieces,
    more tattered for having been retrieved.

    You gave me a gift once.
    I wonder where in this collection
    it can be found —
    is it one of these frayed remnants,
    or many of them,
    or in between them?
    With substance enough
    to hold all the rest in story,
    or not — to let them slip through
    never to be known again?

    Come back again and tell me,
    point it out, sing it to me,
    whisper it at bedtime,
    shout it down the street
    as I am leaving.
    Make sure I don’t forget.
    Don’t be afraid of boring me,
    I will listen to every syllable this time.

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  • May 5, 2014

    Wake

    When I look out over the empty lake at dusk,
    and see the overturned sailboats lining the shore,
    and the day feels full and tired,
    I like to imagine a girl alone on her boat
    ripping along the waves in a healthy breeze,
    surfing the edges of gusts.
    The boat too small for a companion,
    she invents her own play,
    tipping it over and over again
    on her shining, wet gridiron,
    where all of the world meets her.

    Upon reaching the center of the lake,
    she allows her boat to keel a bit,
    slowing as it does.
    She lets the wind push it further,
    up and again, with more and more daring,
    teasing, rocking, hiking out,
    taking her time —
    until finally the boat rolls
    onto its side, silent and
    subdued.
    The sail dips into the water.
    The girl slips, just so,
    onto the centerboard,
    balancing
    and pausing there,
    preparing her final move.

    She rocks the boat,
    measured,
    with gentle springing in her knees,
    and then a bit deeper,
    until the moment comes:
    she presses down hard and bounds
    over the side of the boat,
    and onto the deck —
    as the sail flings up
    over her head
    and catches the breeze —
    magic.

    Her clothes are dry,
    the sail is dripping,
    flapping and feeling sour:
    a victory to savor.
    She builds speed again,
    playing the surf,
    leaving no trail,
    but a slender wake
    that slowly fades.

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  • May 3, 2014

    Sailing

    I sail in my tiny boat,
    skimming across the water,
    gleaming in the sunshine,
    brighter than all the lights
    of a Broadway show —

    I am a star,
    casting radiance into the space before me,
    shimmering over the surface of the lake,
    across the bow,
    up to and far beyond the billowing canvas —
    unloosed, set free,

    connected to earth
    through water and light,
    discovering,
    revealing
    the secrets hidden
    under the stillness
    of this flowing rush.

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  • April 30, 2014

    Stay

    There is a deer grazing
    in our woods
    behind the bunkhouse,
    speckled with sunlight,
    wandering in silence,
    but for the slow rustle of leaves
    under its hooves as it grazes
    for blackberries.

    It was much noisier here once:
    children racing
    on hard flat swings
    and climbing the one-armed
    oak that stood behind;
    grownups shucking corn,
    sipping cocktails;
    voices chattering
    in a million conversations

    that never mattered
    except that they happened
    in this place
    among these people
    who would remember
    and come to embody them.
    No deer graced the back
    of the bunkhouse then.

    But here you are now,
    making the woods both
    light and somber at once.
    In silence,
    you hold all the things
    that came before
    that will come to be,
    in our little woods,
    in our little blackberry patch,
    behind the bunkhouse,
    bringing lightness
    to the shadows.
    Stay
    and tell us what you see.

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  • April 29, 2014

    All’s well that ends (or, My penultimate NaPoWriMo post)

    The poet is a beggar: the month’s now been run;
    All is, well, . . . ended, when tomorrow is done.
    That you express content (or do not oth’wise say)
    Amazes and pleases day exceeding day!
    I honor your patience then, and thank your kind hearts,
    For not sending hate mail as I mangled our art.

    —————————-
    A very modest play on the epilogue to Shakespeare’s All’s Well That Ends Well.

    I genuinely want to thank everyone reading this blog for your patience with all of my spur-of-the-moment poems this month, and for your exceptionally kind support. I am thrilled to have gotten to know so many wonderful, fellow poets and look forward to continuing our travels together.

    There is one more poem left for tomorrow (promise it is not my worst, at least not in my opinion, which is often wrong). Then we can all take a deep breath and do math for a few days . . . or whatever . . . to cleanse our noggins and prepare ourselves for the editor’s scalpel!

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  • April 28, 2014

    Swim teacher

    It is when I reflect on you
    that I see myself most clearly,
    bobbing in the pool on one foot,
    pretending that I am swimming,
    trying to placate you.
    You see me and know
    I am faking it,
    too frightened to let go,
    to risk drowning.
    You won’t be fooled,
    rolling your eyes.

    I would like to think you accept
    this about me.
    Perhaps you do —
    you don’t let on.

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