sonnet at sixty-five
I leap [this late] like a startled crow
choosing verbs & vowels augur allow
such loft & shimmer my summer
yews. I [l]earn evening light
[like a foreign tongue] back-yard
vixen [voracious] violets. I crave
a villa in Vilnius vermillion
flip-flops & one last visit
with my mother who smoked
at dusk & prayed her vast wants.
my mirrored face [hers] a map now
or visa opens [crack & caw] vistas
this new invalid country.
free-write
St. Mary’s girl at the metro bus stop
pleated skirt gray blazer canvas bag silvered
with duct tape MAYA in block letters
along the bag’s flap
hugs a book and opens
her flip-top Marboro Lights taps out
one smoke
stows the pack
all of this
as I’m walking by eye liner glitter
lids fishnet gloves got a light?
she smiles at me sorry I say
Congress Street humming her book –
Plath’s Ariel
I smile at that
and at her as I walk toward a different school
to teach English in a classroom with two tall windows
and green walls today’s lesson
the one about choosing action verbs rather than
any form of the verb to be
two boys play-scuffle
near the door and another boy cries
for his rabbits killed by a fox last night
and a girl worries about the test because she always
freaks out on tests and she never really learned how to study
and what’s the point anyway and someone
stayed up all night playing
Assassin’s Creed IV someone’s surly
and mean because she’s so scared
and her parents think she’s not trying and of course she’s not
but if only
my students open
their backpacks their notebooks open
their Huck Finns their iphones and planners open
their mouths to say what they think what
they don’t know haven’t read
what they can’t understand
each of them opens
and opening is not strong enough
though it’s clearly an action a choice
both literal and metaphorical
all of them exquisite
in battered Nikes
ipods and vampire
novels or Plath
and I know this is it –
both action and being
opening in them as they open
journals and use soft
verbs esp. the verb to be
(as in this is who I am right now)
like duct tape
like the singe of smoke
like the indelible letters
of a name
Gloves For ZJ. International School of Prague, 2006 Too fine for work, too thin for winter, the color of cinnamon potpourri, rose petals, these red gloves I've bought - simple self indulgence. The tag inside reads: crafted in China. And I imagine girls - their dark heads bent over, stitching thumbs -like m's when laid out flat - and a flock of between-finger v's. Penmanship in supple cowhide. Flat shapes, finger to finger, cashmere shadows nested in leather palms, they memorize hands, sew in their sleep the scent of raw leather, of dye, of fine wool fluff. And I think of Zhihuong, the Chinese girl in English 10, wearing pink corduroys, pink sweater - awkward, dyslexic, her voice bowing. She bends over crooked letters, her nails startlingly red. She writes: in my country 75 pupils in class. Teacher may not like you. You sit side-by-side, almost on top of. You try to learn as much as you can. "GLOVES" WON THE 2007 PERIGEE POETRY CONTEST. IT APPEARS IN RADOST, MY RED (2016)