The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Roger Pfingston
The Deer Poem
Before we finally thought to look up, sighting your crumpled body on the path leading down from the abandoned railroad bridge, we smelled you for days at that wooded end of our walks through town on the B-Line Trail, fearing it might be one of the homeless who frequent these woods. It was the maggots, their milky crawling over asphalt, that stopped us cold as we scraped and twisted our shoes in the runners' white rock, wondering what could've spawned such a teeming mass.
Thus we found you—darkly sprawled, half-eaten thing—the writhing in your belly visible even from our distance, brought down perhaps by a poorly gauged jump from the track, who knows what in pursuit. And there you died or fell dead, concealed by the fringe of foliage. For weeks we've kept a passing journal of your disassembly, the odd mound you've become, while each day's traffic continues its living burn, the bridge abutment on either side defaced with anger and love.
Thwarted
The gutter peckers are busy this fall day, come up out of the grass, out of the burning trees to feed in the narrow trough, cat poised in the bay window, wide-eyed and born to leap, jaw trembling at the peck and scratch.
Her throat constricts to jagged cries when one drops full view, attacking its mirrored self, flashing thud of rust-feathered breast that triggers the upward thrust, claws bared to bring it down, thwarted by the alchemy of glass,
though just as quick her muscles tense to something new, wind freeing the wingless hues that dip and glide to a tinfoil tap and rustle on the ground below, the seeming echo teasing her ear, firing the green of her eyes.
Primer
Cave, camel, humpback, whatever your local tongue prefers, it's still one ugly cricket. Not a chirper (no haiku poet's companion here!) nor the badass spider it would have you believe, though wall clinging is among its artful dodges, four-inch legs akimbo, cocked and ready.
When discovered it will jump the unexpected, meaning at you, before it pops away, and if, in the dark of your basement, it finds slim pickings (the drier the better in that regard), it will devour its own legs, the good news being it cannot regenerate as it slows and tilts to a dusty stillness.
Indiana Redux
The distance between Darmstadt and Haubstadt in 1958 was five miles, more or less, and still is, evoking a sameness that pleasures the mind, both towns north of Evansville on Highway 41, not to mention the black-headed goat still crossing the road among the sheep, my girl snuggled tight and popping Dentyne, this in my dad's new Buick with one of those grinning grilles, WJPS rocking us due south to the Sunset Drive-in where the on-screen clock is timing down, though we both know there's time to spare, cartoons and previews before the lion roars, announcing the main feature, above it all the man in the moon as stoic as ever in spite of the stars.
The Point of Her Story
Still trying to adjust her hearing aid, my mother is telling the story of my Aunt Lorene, oldest of five sisters, gone now, born on the cusp of a war that didn't mean a tinker's damn to the Sandage family trying to plow a living from sorghum on a small farm in southern Indiana.
Telling how a teenage Lorene was thrown from a horse and dragged over a barbed-wire fence that tore the flesh from her arms and legs in bloody strips. It was the late twenties and they were poor as Job's turkey, my mother says. There wasn't money for or even the thought of paying a doctor to treat the wounds. Turpentine and rags, that's how her mom and dad took care of things like that.
Lorene grew up a country beauty in spite of scars, raised five daughters and a son in a house half wrapped in woods scented with honeysuckle where Uncle Dave, his jaw pouched with a plug of Stoker's, hunted rabbits and squirrels for meat they fried in a skillet of grease and onions. Like most married men, he died before she did twenty years later in her sleep, my mother's hearing aid whistling as she taps my knee and says, "Now that's the way to go, God willing." Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |