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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 9         Page 61

She Was

(A poem for my beloved wife Nancy)

She was

She was

She was

A girl by chance I knew

who walked so sure not slow

A woman on her way

Far places she did go

So fast I could not see

a side I did not know

a secret kept so well

one she dares not show

a muse to men she drew

and women they could be

so like her as she flew

passed them sure and free

she was

she was

she was

not being what she saw

bringing things so new

changing all the rules

a wild wind when it blew

a strong defiant view

timeless out of time

she loved me if I grew

so I could make her mine

she took me far away

then brought me home again

to witness a new way

to put the thought to pen

she was

she was

she was

travails along her path

not hold her back for long

made her stronger still

 so I could write and sing her song

she danced above the fray,

 to catch her was to win the prize

one that lasts not long

for even perfect life must die

she fought so hard so long

yet never showed her pain

she called my name out loud

so to her side I came

to watch her light grow faint,

then flicker, and was gone

eternal like the stars,

a glitter that goes on and on

memories she left

seem like she is near

flashes of her past

still are fresh and clear

there may never be

one so filled with life

will I ever see again

someone to fill her space

alone I face a life

to build it day by day

her spirit guides me on

the pain will go away

she was

she was

she was

memories she left

seem like she is near

flashes of her past

still are fresh and clear

there may never be

one so filled with life

will I ever see again

someone to fill her space

alone I face a life

to build it day by day

her spirit guides me on

the pain will go away

she was

she was

she was

memory will not die

then becomes a myth

like a breathless sigh

with a final kiss

she is

she is

she is

DONDE ME LLEVA LA LLUVIA

Cuando la lluvia cae plink, plink, plink

en un aire acondicionado en la ventana

de mi apartamento en Nueva York, anhelo

mis visitas de niñez durante veranos a 

fincas de Puerto Rico.

Semi dormitando en hamacas oscilantes

bajo el hipnótico thrum thrum thrum

de la lluvia en techos de metal corrugados 

mientras brisas frescas me llenaban con 

un mundo de aromas ricos. 

Hojas de mango, árbol de quenepa, pomarrosa,

piña y café hirviendo.

Décadas de huracanes desde mi último viaje

me deja preguntando si todo se ha ido igual que

mis parientes. Las pequeñas chozas, cuya mojada

madera olían a canela, viviendas de jibaritos

calentando agua con harina de café en latas,

miríadas de hojas relucientes, el aroma de tierra 

mojada, las casas grandes de dos pisos con verandas.

Me pregunto si estuviera en un avión que se acerca a la isla, 

yo todavía pudiera oler el cambio en el aire de

frío y soso a cálido, terroso y dulce.

© Patrica Carragon: Summertime in the Park

Manicure

Flirty Pink nails 
like Rhododendron
in my front yard,
bloom on my hands.
Mornings, evenings,
doves coo, hatch eggs.
Now a hint of rain,
so many dead this year.
I could look back.
I could mourn. I won’t.
Recline, instead, 
on the green chaise
to write.
A small breeze
across my naked midriff
lets me think
the sky will always be
this blue. Mostly
I’m happy—bright nails, 
small lights,
burst into flame.
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