Saturday, December 11, 2010

In honor of Bernie Sanders

Speaks for itself ...



Music of Rich

Beneath solicitous streetlamps
a dozen matrons
ease themselves out of the Club.
Their legs, like clappers
in the stout bells of their skirts,
toll Money, Money, Money.

The men attending them
emit a balding glow
above pale, papery shirtfronts.
Fruit of Our Labors, they chant
in file along the sidewalk
under servile trees.

Who gave them the keys to the city,
these people as noisy
as pots and pans
but proud and not so serviceable?


Thursday, December 9, 2010

Tomato Promiscuity




Another garden poem...


Tomato Promiscuity

You are the too fond parent.
Setting them out in May,
twenty-four inches of bare soil
between each lonesome plant,
you tousle the fuzzy tip
of the young tomato,
pity the straggle of root strands
clinging to your hand
and the seed leaf dangling
like a broken arm.

So tenuous is their first week
in the world of weather
that you visit your little ones daily.
Sometimes they topple forward,
as if to lay their heads on the executioner's block:
then the grubby cutworm moves aside his stone
and trundles towards them;
the flat-footed rabbit descends
from the sky;
the pederast wind blows up
and loves them until, dead threads,
they disappear entirely.

All this you must prevent.
And if you succeed,
soon your charges stand again
at full attention, too pithy
for cutworms, reassuring you
crows can't hurt them anymore.
Now their business is pleasure:
drinking, rustling for manure,
luffing their limber bodies up and down
to win over wind's wrestling.
Your solicitous wrists
and dusty ankles
are no longer required.

Come July the tomatoes flower,
sensing they're not alone.
And then they rush outwards
into one another's warm green arms.
The rest is a very old story:
how you tried to keep things straight,
how you'll never be sure in the end
whose tomatoes are whose.

Friday, September 10, 2010

"We must cultivate our garden..."

This poem makes a good start. At the time I wrote it, I was living in an upstairs apartment in a towering but already dilapidated Victorian house in Ithaca, NY.  I cut my very first vegetable garden into the only level tract of ground in its steep hillside yard. This is how I've gardened ever since: on a small scale with my own brand of piety and maternal affection.

The Garden

I peel back sod, like skin, from this small plot,
and turn it upside down to blanch in darkness.
Sun brittles inverted roots;
Air rings with the trauma of my hoe.

I frighten even myself, being no sure gardener,
knowing nothing of the future but a dream
festooned with vines, pendant with grapes and tomatoes.

I would become a member of the church
which lies on its side, whose hope
is Cornucopia: that nature's imprint,
joined to my desire,
will be wholesome, will take the shape
of that long, inexhaustible basket of fruit
pointing back behind itself

and tumbling out ahead.