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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 10           Page 8

Still Life

Like the 9th circle of Lucifer’s realm,

all is silent and frozen and white

against a studded darkness. At first it is as if

nothing can break free of this stasis,

an icy silence like I once

broke out of in panic at its grip.

But I look and listen for more.

Indeed, the pastels of windsock are florid

against such a lack and the yellow cap

of a finch feeder makes a splash.

A fret of high branches moves.

Or is this only hope?

Some god can surely trace

all this circuitry

back until Cain’s treachery

revives Adam, sends him walking about

once more, as the dead still awaken memory.

In what vast buried vault lies

all the never-again thoughts of lost moments?

How we drop this, our cosmic litter,

thoughtlessly, intent on something else

like a careless mother come home

from market without her child.

Published in Edgz, #5 Wint/Spr 2003

A Stir of Briny Scents

He mails me the works of art and stories

of his coastal St. Andrews childhood,

days when we lived west of the old city

down streets outside the ancient gateway,

we young adults. I wandered the same

rough streets where he played, daily

went for provisions to small shops,

the baker, the greengrocer, the butcher,

the fishmonger. He hung around a little café,

one I never noticed, picked up odd jobs

from the weary staff, his home

surrounded daily by fishy odors

until the evening’s frying of fish cakes

and haggis puddings filled the air

with the scent of hot oils. Early mornings

the fresh catches arrived from the nearby

fishing villages, Anstruther and Pittenweem.

Sundays found him at mass with his parents

while we spent those morning hours

in the simple chapels of these fisher folk

when not in the ancient Holy Trinity in town.

With each congregation we watched our cold breath,

clumped vapor of our musical exhalations.

In the city, the lofty gray stones

and high pulpits where the beadle latched

the pastor in to impart heavenly wisdom

from above marked that day of rest

as loftier than in the simple chapels

of the sea harvest families.

These places have all changed

over these years, with heating now,

some easy hot water, several touristy hotels …

but the scents and simplicity of the fish-dealing folk

linger with him, an old man now,

and with me, an even older woman,

and the stone walls stand forever smelling

of ancient brine to awaken in us again

a bond of our youth and other days.

Haute Cuisine

He mails me the works of art and stories

of his coastal St. Andrews childhood,

days when we lived west of the old city

down streets outside the ancient gateway,

we young adults. I wandered the same

rough streets where he played, daily

went for provisions to small shops,

the baker, the greengrocer, the butcher,

the fishmonger. He hung around a little café,

one I never noticed, picked up odd jobs

from the weary staff, his home

surrounded daily by fishy odors

until the evening’s frying of fish cakes

and haggis puddings filled the air

with the scent of hot oils. Early mornings

the fresh catches arrived from the nearby

fishing villages, Anstruther and Pittenweem.

Sundays found him at mass with his parents

while we spent those morning hours

in the simple chapels of these fisher folk

when not in the ancient Holy Trinity in town.

With each congregation we watched our cold breath,

clumped vapor of our musical exhalations.

In the city, the lofty gray stones

and high pulpits where the beadle latched

the pastor in to impart heavenly wisdom

from above marked that day of rest

as loftier than in the simple chapels

of the sea harvest families.

These places have all changed

over these years, with heating now,

some easy hot water, several touristy hotels …

but the scents and simplicity of the fish-dealing folk

linger with him, an old man now,

and with me, an even older woman,

and the stone walls stand forever smelling

of ancient brine to awaken in us again

a bond of our youth and other days.

North Star-Pole Star

The rhinestone studs

of night used to enchant me,

so full of the ancient stories

to enliven for the children

and the drives to darkest skies

to join the expert ones

trying out my giant Dobsonian tube

that my astronomy guy, Steve,

could never quite get to hold

its proper calibration, to sweep

up clouds and clusters

of far-away fire. Magic dances

on the crisp edges of mystery

again twirled on the dawn

of a Bolivian solar eclipse

high in the Andes.

Old now, I take such sparkly things

out of the jewelry box,

re-live the years when we,

the sky and I, could

dance together all night

Lucky Strikes

Our classroom in the old building

was carpeted and the only window

was of an upturned slab-shape

easily covered from the big rolls

of colored butcher paper stored

in the dim hallway. Our children came

one day a week from 16 schools, they gifted

our individually-administered oral tests said,

classes small, from 9 to 18 or 19.

We’d turn off the lights and lie on the floor

on our backs listening to Cassette tape

of an old 1940s radio program, “Suspense,”

I think, not my own childhood joy,

“Inner Sanctum” with its horrible creak

of an opening door. The story was called

“Sorry, Wrong Number,” a one-woman show

recorded by Agnes Moorehead. We watched

ourselves turned to terror by sound alone

and our own sensation-deprived brains,

an hour of group-think and bonding.

The old tape, though, began with a ubiquitous

thought-shaping commercial: “Doctors recommend

Lucky Strikes three to one.” The ad appealed

to ladies admiring the sultry puffs on screen

of Joan Crawford or Lauren Bacall.

and to veterans addicted by free cigarette

handouts to combat-facing troops.

Lucky us, though, together,

thinking, wondering …. how far

can just words go.

© CTvM: 2022

Looking Into Last Lights

Ellen and I, entranced, lifting

our contact-paper-covered

toilet paper rolls into twilight,

sought out the sparkles of the setting

Venus surrounded still

with daylight deep in Texas desert lands

where the vultures lined up along the fences

every evening before our long night

of sky watching …. or my call to her

in an Upstate New York hospital

room, she, the nurse said, staring out

a west window at the sunset,

called her to talk with a far-away Carol

… “Oh! Do you know Carol?”

she asked me, the closest approach

she managed to recognizing me,

she there in the shine of another last light.

But there was always wonder

in her voice, and I, I kept

     wondering

           wondering at all

                  l the things

                          those unseen black holes

                                   swallow

                                         up.

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