Tuesday, May 31, 2022

The Swift Walls of the Funnel

 
Faith and Followings
—Poetry and Original Artwork by Joyce Odam, 
Sacramento, CA
 
 
 
ESSENCE

Here in the dusk, by a slow, bright stream,
the unmindful child—
ever at the brink of curiosity,
with childlike faith and followings—
comes to sit on the bank and listen to
the moving water shimmer past.

And the bushes sigh with disturbance,
and the dark trees whisper.

And the musing child—in the dusk—
in the rippling moonlight—
sits stroking the make-believe rabbit
the child would love to keep and love.
And high in the trees now, in the dark,
the Cheshire cat sits purring.
 
                                           
(prev. pub. in Medusa’s Kitchen, 8/7/2018)
 
 
 
The Brink of Curiosity
 


NARROWING

she lives tightly
like shoulders of fear
like hunched intentions
replaced by procrastinations

all year
her seasons lag
like her work
like her dreams
her eyesight is failing
her energies lie to her

she closes the spaces
with tiny perfections
then admires them
till they disappear
 
 
 
The Undertones
 


MEASURING-UP

You thought the stars would move her,
the sentiment of roses,
the well-rehearsed looks
from your adoring eyes—

even long walks by the summer ocean or
braving some tawdry neighborhood with all its
danger : the following shadows : the undertones
of warning : your bravado : her challenge to you,

and you obliged—her own star in the heavens,
endless roses, suffering looks
from your adoring eyes—the way
you never understood her.
 
 
 
 Well-Rehearsed
 


MEAN HUMOR

He follows the formula.
Flip.
Rehearsed.
The smug smile of control
in charge of the humor here,
on stage with himself,
the bright boy from so long ago,
still bright,
still leaning,
still good with a dig or a quip.
Most of us still smile at him
with tired indulgence.

_____________________

NARROW

I
cry
the
self-
reunion
and the
stuffed
pain
be-
tween
and the
slipping
time
and
the
dragging
time
and the
swift
walls
of the
fun-
nel.
 
 
 
In The Dusk
 


THE NARROWING POINT

This long path between trees, their shadows
crisscrossing in the last of the sunlight—

this long perspective into evening, this soft
intensity of light—how soon the darkness

will know itself and obliterate
the narrowing point the eye is fixed upon.
 
 
 
To Name This Darkness
 


NAMING THE DARKNESS
After “Stanbury Moor” (Photograph by Fay Godwin) from Remains of Elmet (Poems by Ted Hughes)

What shall I name this darkness with its torn black sky,
its shadows that sweep the distances.

I know this night is strange but it has brought me here
to mourn, so I mourn. I fasten to the horizon

with bleak unwilling eyes—it is too far.
I am where I am, at another beginning, no strength

and no provisions. One silver path cuts through
the land, one curve of hill outlining land from sky.

A last thin rim of light hangs low enough to sharpen—
I’ll aim to that—still bright enough to beckon.
 
 
 
The Envious Mind
 


THE MOONS OF HEAVEN

The moons of heaven
pluralize and drift—
how much time they take
is a moot concept;
they change and travel—
searching
the trapped sky—
trapped by the moons.

We try to imagine
how this
is so,

why the moons
wander,
come and go,

across the sky’s
vast reach,
until we know.

Our questions
still beseech
the envious mind
for answer—
the moons
but a focus of image,
through which all our
truth and doubt seek transfer.

___________________

THE TIMELESS SUMMER

As the red crest rises, I live on beyond it: my
other life—the one not taken by the red dream
—or any other death, avoided.

(That my cry of warning went unheeded in the
dream is a small detail, wondered about . . . )

As the red crest rises, I wait in the interminable,
slow-motioned wait a dream takes to realize it
is a dream and I needn’t fear it.

(That I went strangely terrified toward the town
with its unheeding people is still a guilt of fail-
ure; they looked at me as if I was only dream-
ing . . . )


As the red crest rises, it becomes a red cowl—
unbreaking, but curving ever higher—over the
shore-front shops and narrow boardwalks and
the indifferent people.

(That I still bear the weight of that terror is
part of the old distance—the sea was Kelly-Red
—rendered into a permanent dream that I once
dreamed and still can feel : the ultimate crash
ing and my urge of warning . . . )
 
 
 
How This Is So
 


NASCENT

I want to be one
with this loneliness—
here in this center which can go
each way—here where all things coexist,
the light flaring down and the darkness filling.

I want to be the light as it disperses,
and to be the shadow that is touched
by the dispersing light; I want to
be the stillness that watches this;
I want to be the motion that results.  

Oh, here is a sleeping bird with a silver wing
and a wing of dark. I want to fall asleep
in its eye and be where it is—
alive and alone in this
perfect center.

I want to be no threat and have no foe.
I want to take in a long, deep breath
and let out a quiet sigh—the
way I do when I turn from
din to quiet music.

____________________

Today’s LittleNip:

THE HERB OF GRACE
—Joyce Odam

There is a little rue to feel—
there is a little view
that falters as you see it.

There is a little trick to know—
but nothing that will free it.

____________________

Joyce Odam
(with help from daughter Robin Gale Odam), has sent us poems and artwork about our Seed of the Week, Narrow Escapes (starting with Alice) on this last day of May,  and we thank them for that. Our new Seed of the Week is “Too Close to the Sun”. 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. And see every Form Fiddlers’ Friday for poetry form challenges, including those of the Ekphrastic type.

If you happen to be re-visiting yesterday’s post, the one with the staircases, don’t be bumfuzzled by the second photo of same—I accidentally posted the same photo twice. Stairwell 1 and Stairwell 2 became two copies of Stairwell 1. (Sorry to Nolcha Fox, who sent these two public domain photos to go with her poems.)

____________________

—Medusa
 
 
 
 “…here where all things coexist,
the light flaring down and the darkness filling.”
—Public Domain Photo 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


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