Tag Archives: poetry

JULY 1, 2016

 

Outside in the shade, the two-speed fan
is like an oscillating blow torch
offering velocity to 110 degrees—

yellow pad and pencil, my red wine
warm as a tepid cup of tea,
I listen to Outlaw on Sirius wondering

if any of us can make a difference
to how the world shakes-out after
another summer of half-baked promises,

malevolent campaigns cooking-up
new recipes to wear upon
the ageless face of God.

Dawn cool through the screen door,
gold print upon my coffee cup:
MT. SENTINEL RANCH, 1898 – 1998

                                for Francis Gardner
                                       1942 -2016

 

Francis Gardner

 

LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING

 

The Live Oak bundles roots
in cracks of rock where water leaks
from scoops of granite—high

Sierra lakes filled by snowmelt
thirty crooked miles or more,
and six thousand feet of gravity, away

to stay alive. A mass of tendrils
chasing a tiny stream into pipe
before the trough to drink deeply,

to swell into a rope of roots
to plug and claim the most
precious here to life until it

disappears. Everyone knows
this place beneath a string
of sycamores and cottonwoods

growing sideways for the light
in the canyon’s deep and narrow cut—
where water spills into troughs,

pools overflowing one into another
where resident thistles and weeds
compete, crawl with black ants

to feed the birds and rodents
who in turn inflate snakes
that enjoy the cool and damp.

Enough to share with cows,
I come to clean the pipes
that make the spring box work.

 

ARTICHOKES

 

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The last artichokes,
unpicked for the bloom and seed,
beckon bumblebees.

 

’57 ELECTION

 

Campaigning for V.P.
of the Student Council
in the fifth grade:

I claimed to be half-horse,
half-alligator and a little attached
with snapping turtle

and have the fastest horse,
prettiest sister, the surest rifle
around Exeter.

I promised to pay attention
and do the best I could. Enough,
in those days, to get elected.

 

FORECAST

 

We have been warned
by hot Valley gusts
surging up canyon
for a week of evenings—

by weathermen:
ten-day broil,
triple-digit teens—

to pump water, irrigate,
keep tanks and troughs full,
augment the garden,
out at daylight
and in by ten

as days dehydrate
and clay and granite rock
cook all night long.

 

SUMMER SOLSTICE

 

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Seventy-five days old
the last time a full moon moved
through the shortest night:

1948—I wake at two to see
wild oats blond on sloping walls
as the dogs bark in the distance

on coyote business, like always.
Dry years in the San Joaquin,
Dad shipped thin steers in the rain

when I was born, bought some more
to feed on green into July
I can’t imagine possible, but

we stayed the droughts, like always,
in a canyon I’ve never left
for long—nowhere calling,

no other place to claim my tears
of sweat and blood, sentiments scattered
on dry ground like leaves of poetry.

 

ODE TO THE BULLFROG

 

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It’s not a clean world
where frogs can live like kings
on their own island

apart from the main
stream, where stagnant
boils under the summer sun

with new life they trust
will keep them fed
tomorrow. So far

from our marsh
and mire beginnings,
we tidy up instead.

 

MHW 1287 RUGER 010

 

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Five years of service: docile daughters
who have daughters of their own
camouflaged in black with bone,

he’s left his stamp, gets along
without much help, keeps the peace
when all the bulls are grumbling

on vacation in the shade. Another world
within the one we own, he could be
human, but with a better disposition.

                                             for Loren Mrnak

 

TUITION

 

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Education was cheaper in the old days
when we memorized dates, declined verbs
and parsed sentences to pieces—

fell in and out of love like puppies
chasing the next pair of shoes
to try on, or not—that’s how we learned

about ourselves. All my teachers are gone,
or busy getting old, but their younger selves
reside in my brain, fuzzy faces reminding me

that honesty is terribly hard to come by.
Everything we need to know is almost free:
an easy payment plan as long as I remember.

 

WET SPRING

 

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The trails are gone,
hats above a sea of wild oats
like navigating ground fog

blind to rocks and ruts
in a slow gather
bringing tunnels together,

cows and calves. All the brags
of tying knots above the withers,
dally wraps around the horn,

ring tame and distant—
even the best broke horse
can’t resist temptation.