The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Shep Ranbom
THE ATTIC STAIRS
Chagall would have painted us in blue, floating above the roof tiles as if we knew how to levitate by instinct. But love needs these tin steps and oak rails to be freed from screaming day, its post-its and bothers which give no rest, not even in bed. The painter was not wrong: partners can be scaffold-wings who help each other rise above nature. But their dreams fly mostly in the doomed imagination, the un-scheming lift of spirit that crashes downward in nervous waking.
I crow from the basement, the cock on the ground, not the bridegroom. I am followed by the sound of entertainments: streetnoise, football, stickfights drowning the day’s dull terrors with lights that flash with injury or defeat. From this low height, I calm myself, imagining you leaning against the attic railing to stand straight like a young girl holding the rink boards, learning to skate. Each glance upward opens a skybeam. How gracefully you work, storing summer clothes in racks that reek of cedar. The naked bulb shows off your shape, the strong Cuprinoled beams and slats, the mysterious boxes that house your summer things, and the wildness of your straw hair, the apex of my dwelling.
MY FATHER'S COURT
As serious as James Naismith, he measured the exact length of the court, and planted a lead pipe exactly 10 feet above sea level near a natural rise, setting chalk to mark the endlines before leveling gravel from the street to the edge of Mom’s phlox.
Like a bandleader, he motioned his sidemen, telling them when and where to enter and to dig, then started the electric jackhammers tamping. As the earth grew flat, he secured the backboard to the pole, making an ancient white sail, and unveiled, from the back of his official blue car, a bag of leather Spaldings, discards from the Y, telling me, apropos of nothing, “It’s all perfectly legal.”
The fleet was dispersed to Ludlow. Dad climbed a ladder onto the rooftop to set two floodlights. Night after night, we lit up the neighborhood, and for years went inside only when summoned for dinner or to study --on our own terms--the rules of Euclid and Hoyle.
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
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