The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Lyn Lifshin
I THINK OF MY GRANDFATHER
on a cramped ship headed toward Ellis Island. Fog, fog horns for a lullaby. The black pines, a frozen pear. Straw roofs on fire. If there were postcards from the sea there might have been a Dear Hannah or Mama, hand colored with salt. I will come and get you.
If the branches are
green, pick the apples.
When I write next, I will
have a pack on my
back, string and tin.
I dream about the snow
in the mountains. I never
liked it but I dream of
you tying a scarf
around my hair, your
words that white dust
IF MY GRANDMOTHER COULD HAVE WRITTEN A POSTCARD TO THE SISTER LEFT BEHIND
It would be written on sand, or on a hand colored photo graph of a country with nobody waiting with guns, no thatched roofs on fire, no hiding in trees after a knock on the door: Sister, it is
nothing like we had
or what we imagined.
There are no Jews
in the small rural
towns hardly. They
don't spit or say
we are thieves but
it is as icy in Vermont
as days in Russia.
Lake Champlain is
not like our sea. We
are safe, we are
lonely
IF MY GRANDMOTHER WOULD HAVE WRITTEN A POST CARD TO ODESSA
she would write her name in salt, salt and mist, an SOS from the ship sea wind slaps with night water. Somehow I'm
dreaming of Russian
pines. I don't dream
of the houses on fire,
babies pressed into
a shivering woman's
chest to keep them
still. Someone had
something to eat the
color of sun going
down behind the
hill late summer,
rose, with its own
sweet skin. They
are everywhere in
America. If the lilies
bloom in our
town of darkness,
just one petal in an
envelope would be
enough
FROM THE FIRST WEEKS IN NEW YORK, IF MY GRANDFATHER COULD HAVE WRITTEN A POSTCARD
if he had the words, the language. If he could spell. If he wasn't selling pencils but knew how to use them, make the shapes for words he doesn't know. If he was not weighed down with a pack that made red marks on his shoulder, rubbed the skin that grew pale under layers of wet wool, he might have taken the brown wrapping paper and tried to write three lines in Russian to a mother or aunt he might never see again. But instead, too tired to wash hair smelling of burning leaves he walked thru, maybe he curled in a blue quilt, all he had of the cottage he left that night running past straw roofs on fire, dreamt of those tall black pines, but not how, not yet 17, he will live in a house he will own, more grand than any he saw in his old country Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |