The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Martin Dickinson
APPLEPICKING, FITCHBURG, WISCONSIN
for Laurie We drove in my red Volkswagen out the fish hatchery road to the "u-pick" orchard that Friday when school let out. There we saw patches of sky through branches heavy with Golden Delicious and rose-colored Cortlands and the grass filled with the fallen beauties. Grabbing them, we bit into their crunchy skins. Juice dripping from your lips, you asked a seven-year-old's question: "is it stealing to eat so many before we pay?" I looked at the streaked Stayman I'd bitten, my mouth full of its sweetness, and answered: "No, the cost gets figured in." Driving home, bushels of the fruit crowded our back seat. We drifted in the aroma of apples, my hands on the wheel still sticky with juice. It's a beautiful world, you know. Sometimes you take beauty just as you find it and total up the price later, or not at all. Remember? I made a wrong turn, so we wove our way among browned fields where blue silos stood like giant thermoses in the black earth of Wisconsin. Unloading our store onto the kitchen table, we felt set for life, counting them over and over. DEATH OF OSIP MANDELSTAM
December 27, 1938 You gaze from your cell to the Vladivostok hills, the empty, December wind whistling outside. Again you are in a sledge packed with straw lurching through Moscow streets heaving down into black ruts of dirty snow, or in Leningrad you warm your palms over a fire before the brightly lit theater listening to the rustle of the audience hurrying inside for the play, and staring into the flames you mumble a prayer for yourself, a prayer for Russia into the Soviet night, or again in Olga's embrace you taste for a final time her soft, salt lips. Reverently you begin to reconstruct, phrase by phrase, your poems about these things. The earth is grim, unjust. As the knock comes at the door you know-- it is your executioner. WASHING ROCKS AT THE GEOLOGY MUSEUM Red Jacobville stone of Michigan, rhyolite of Baraboo, glacially sculpted kettle moraine granite of Wisconsin, rock of Utah Paradox Basin. Geologists spent lives chipping at earth's tough corners, researchers with rock hammers. Now I lift their work from dark crates to the light, I, who have spent mere decades on this planet on my night job working down through eras: the Jurassic sandstones, the Triassic shales, the Permian metamorphics, frigid, dark and hard. My brushings retrace the winds of eons, my rinsings renew the flow of vanished oceans. Late one night, noticing sediment in my basin, I lean forward to press one hand into the muck. It leaves a palm print. AFTER THE FIRE
For Andy Taking off into the forest to find signs of life in the stubble of burnt Yellowstone hills, we saw pine saplings growing near tufts of prairie grass. I asked you to pretend to be one of those young lodgepoles, to rise up, hold your arms to the sky and catch the feeling of being a new tree after the great fire. I clicked the shutter--and look: here you are in a floppy, green tee-shirt, a ten-year-old kid, reaching to the sky for the emergence that later came true, posing in front of those charred trunks that go on like blackened phone poles all the way out to the horizon.
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
|