The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Karen Saunders
FATHER-IN-LAW What did you know of the world then? Men rifling over crags, spilling lead into the guts of men, the heads of soldiers killed in the gnawed-grass hills making their debut in the Time-Life books, hewed at the nape and stuck like apples on fences made to keep the goats in, the eyes still open, reflecting the constant sea. And what of the world after that? The impassioned dash of sunlight across the sea, the trawls unfastening their loads, fish drowning in air, the long clouds stiffening along the horizon like burnt-sienna wings, jonquils parting their ludicrous soft mouths. Sometimes a man does not live long enough to forget the burdens of the iris. GEORGETOWN AT NIGHT The pier nudges the river's skin, a lover quivering against another in the half-wit light. The lampposts along the bridge hang in the river like the ribs of a great marlin. The Potomac drenches the moon's twin. This night all is open. Even the fish have forgotten their wet dungeon. They are fluid bats soaring through the belly of darkness. Sexless life: how seldom I have seen this moon this pier this bridge these flying fish. DEMETER IN LATE AUTUMN In the courtyard, tomatoes redden in the darkness, losing their musk to the olive-heavy breeze. The night is empty of sound but for the Aegean fumbling through the hollows of Samos and a pair of mules panicking at the cliff's edge. Nights like this the loudest sounds may be the ones in your head: seven pomegranate seeds spiraling to the realm of the dead, the boiling and splintering of the earth's terrible core. O, to be mortal, to enjoy the promise of an end, to feel just once the pomegranate's acid boring a new hole in your body as your merry fruit is plucked early from the vine. FATHER'S RETURN For years we have waited for him, surrounded by swaths of Spanish moss and the musk of jasmine opening itself in darkness. So practiced are we at watching the wishing-stars pattern the sky each night that we could ignite the universe ourselves, star by star. We have learned to wait, not to expect. But by chance tonight he has come, offering up twelve years of remorse from a worn tin flask, shadowless and not without shame. Moonlight has made him abundant--filling the holes in his pockets, smoothing the whiskey trails on his brow. He stands erect and newly faultless, someone's temporary god. Mother lunges toward him as a widow toward a shape resembling that of the man she lost. Me, I wait as I have always done, elbows deep in bayou grit, watching the gathering stars choke the bewildered sky. NEIGHBORHOOD SUICIDE The hailstorm's colorless echo, rainwater swarming into the sunken drain, tiny footfalls into the earth's core. Sirens howling their scarlet elegy through the neighborhood. Parents opening and closing their mouths like doors unhinged. The rafters in the smoke-blue house across the street still creaking under the noose and its keen load. That low moan the street makes when it is less one child like slow wind across a meadow empty of sun and cattle.
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
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