Rumors
—Poems and Photos by Joyce Odam, Sacramento, CA
THE FATALISTS AT LAND’S END
Here we are with all that we deplore—this low-tide
shore, a small impatient boat creaks in the moonlight
like a metaphor—could we steal it—could we simply
float away from lives that Fate so badly wrote—change
an ending, could we still resist—just sail away—just
sail away from this?
____________________
WITH LONGING
And the heart beats with longing, even as
the blood flows. What does love know
of this—or hate—or any passion?
It is all slow completion, even as it begins.
Take fear, which is delicious—
surface and depth—like a terrible wish.
Is it death we know—
cat and toy—
the prize on the end of a question?
And the blood goes round and round
the body’s universe,
bearing the life along like a tireless swimmer.
Evidence of Rain
THE ENDLESS SORROW
somewhere the
endless sorrow
like a long blue pain
moans my name
for it thinks
it knows me
and that I am
its reason to remain
a sorrow
(first pub. in Oblong Press, 1992)
___________________
ENDURANCE
Do not ask them anything—the women of silences wrap
their tongues in cotton syllables. The women of silences
phrase their eyes with secret blindfolds. The women of
silences mask their faces with feigned expressions. The
women of silences shape their love into heavy wings.
The women of silences cannot fly through walls. The
women of silences cannot break their own strings.
Contrast
ON VALIDATION
I …, alone …, walk among others
and am alone
I walk with my shadow
which forgives me my singularity
which has no wish to become part of
any other shadow
thus, we are never
estranged from one another
and are ever faithful
to our singular existence.
A Calling
THE DIFFERENT ENDING
A child
going into a fairy tale,
that woods
of deep light,
the playground
full of childhood rules
and riddles…
what waits in the center?
a way out?
a way never to return?
the child goes in
and becomes a part
of what is there,
becomes the hushed sound,
the figment of light,
the different ending
to the story.
(first pub. in Red Cedar Review, 1993)
Homage
AN ENDING
She rose from herself on a true day of being—healed and
forlorn for all days done—for all loves loved—for all
false seeing, and opened herself like a door and went
through to her own freeing, where, for a moment, she
held fast, and was not harmed, and was not sent back to
any rending.
Early Evening
POEM WITHOUT AN ENDING
Let us begin a poem and never finish
it—just let it dwindle off the page as if
there is more to be said, but when you
turn the page another one begins. And
let us title it “Poem Without an Ending”
and give it only that one page to struggle
on, ending there, maybe with the word
and, or at least no punctuation-mark in
a punctuated poem. And let it enjamb—
and have too big a gap of meaning—built
up to, but not quite conveyed. And it will
be intense rough draft—the way first
thought comes, so quick and obscure we
can only follow to see where it leads.
And it will lead us away from itself, as if
it resented our awakening—though it is
the one that came to us—tossing like
stones at our window, our faces frozen
there against the darkness, looking out to
see—as if this is the way life is— on its
single page the long quick scribbling—the—
(first pub. in Poetry Now, 1999)
_____________________
Today’s LittleNip:
HAPPY ENDINGS
—Joyce Odam
How frail we were
falling like petals
into each other’s tearing love,
we only wanted
our miracles to happen,
our dreams to come true,
our fairy tales
to have
happy endings.
_____________________
A big thank-you to Joyce Odam for today’s fine poems and photos, as she explores endings, happy or otherwise, for our Seed of the Week: Dead End. Our new Seed of the Week is the poetry form, the Haibun; for an explanation and example, go to www.baymoon.com/~ariadne/form/haibun.htm/. Send your poems, photos & artwork about this (or any other) subject to kathykieth@hotmail.com. No deadline on SOWs, though, and for a peek at our past ones, click on “Calliope’s Closet”, the link at the top of this column, for plenty of others to choose from.
—Medusa (Celebrate Poetry!)
(first pub. in Poetry Now, 1999)
_____________________
Today’s LittleNip:
HAPPY ENDINGS
—Joyce Odam
How frail we were
falling like petals
into each other’s tearing love,
we only wanted
our miracles to happen,
our dreams to come true,
our fairy tales
to have
happy endings.
_____________________
A big thank-you to Joyce Odam for today’s fine poems and photos, as she explores endings, happy or otherwise, for our Seed of the Week: Dead End. Our new Seed of the Week is the poetry form, the Haibun; for an explanation and example, go to www.baymoon.com/~ariadne/form/haibun.htm/. Send your poems, photos & artwork about this (or any other) subject to kathykieth@hotmail.com. No deadline on SOWs, though, and for a peek at our past ones, click on “Calliope’s Closet”, the link at the top of this column, for plenty of others to choose from.
—Medusa (Celebrate Poetry!)
—Anonymous
Photos in this column can be enlarged by
clicking on them once, then clicking on the x
in the top right corner to come back to Medusa.
clicking on them once, then clicking on the x
in the top right corner to come back to Medusa.