Ceci N’est Pas un Cadralor
1.
Every
step along this forgotten road raises dust
that
swirls and darts ahead of me, pushed
by
a fitful breeze. Particles thin, separate, settle.
2.
Against
advice, against the wind, I push my kayak
into
the lake, digging in hard with the paddle. I feel
the
ripples of the waves, whitecaps threatening.
3.
Wheat
fields lie waiting for harvest, sinuous amber
yielding
and pulsing in the heavy embrace
of
autumn winds. Portent of spoiling rain.
4.
Leafless
trees in bitter gales, bend, stand, bend again,
stubbornly
refusing to stay bowed or to break.
Storm
passes. They remain, waiting for spring leaves.
5.
Old
habits anchor deeply, stand rock-solid, defiant
against
the hurricanes of change that blast them.
Small
corners will succumb, crumble, settle.
Gone
Far Away
"...if
you want to borrow Ramon
For
a narrative of your own, remember that any scene
Where
he appears under guard in a mountain village
Should
be confined to the realm of longing"
—Carl Dennis: "Thanksgiving Letter From Harry"
I.
These Are Not Pine Trees
The
jungles of southeast Asia are thick with
trees,
vines, and plants Ramon doesn't know,
can't
pronounce. The only thing that matters
is
knowing which not to touch, not to eat.
He
is suddenly hungry for piñon nuts, roasted.
The
din of the birds and monkeys fades as
he
remembers harvest time. Spreading tarps
under
the trees, then climbing them to shake
hard
and fast. Nuts tumbling from cones
in
a shower that sounded like summer rain.
A
sudden shower of bullets dropped his patrol
but
left Ramon alive. And just like that,
captured.
No one to send word back to say
"Don't
stop looking. I am not dead."
He
is strapped to a pole and carried.
Where?
Doesn't know. How long? Doesn't know.
These
mountains are nothing like home
These
are definitely not pine trees.
Rain
falls, hard. He thinks again of pine nuts
falling
on waiting canvas. Passes out.
II.
How Far Can the Wind Carry Love?
Ramon's
mother sits at the window. No mail.
It's
been six months today since the call—
MIA.
A spear to her heart in three little letters.
Missing.
Dead? Alive? Hurt? Lost? Hungry?
She
would give anything to make him a bowl
of
chicken-tortilla soup. Fat green chiles
from
the Hatch valley. Fresh roasted. Hand-peeled.
Stories
come back from others missing, then found.
Enemy
camps. Mountain villages. Troops moving on
and
leaving useless prisoners behind. Maybe
some
other mother will see in his eyes what she would—
a
good boy who needs to come home. She walks up
into
the mountains. Talks to the sky, the trees.
Swears
she hears "mami" in the whisper of the wind.
Answers
"mijo" and prays he will hear.
III.
Today We Read Neruda
Ramon
closes his eyes against the summer heat.
He
makes the day Tuesday. High school English.
Second
period. Back row. Window seat.
He
opens his book with his mind.
Neruda
advises him, “Don’t go far off…”
He
doesn’t know any more how far off
he
is from that classroom in New Mexico
from
everything he knew in 1969.
He
remembers missing graduation.
Low
lottery number for the draft and
an
early birthday, he was 18 in January
drafted
in February, marching through boot camp
and
into a jungle a world away by May. Far away.
Mosquitos
hum and buzz but he doesn’t flinch.
He
doesn’t care anymore. Let them bite.
He’s
immune to everything but memory,
the
only thing that can make him shake now
"the
little drops of anguish will all run together"
He
opens his eyes as beads of sweat find a path
down
his face, his neck, his back. Anguish, yes.
Those
early days after he was taken prisoner,
Anguish
was all he knew, trying to will her
a
message across the ocean, knowing
she
would be waiting "as in an empty station."
No
train to take her to him, him to her.
He
forces himself back to Neruda,
Feels
the smoke that roams, sees
the
fluttering eyelids, the pleading
silent
look that he took with him to Nam.
It
leaves him full of longing, empty of hope,
Ragged
and cold, hot with rage
at
the here and now he wakes to daily.
He
takes a deep breath in. And out.
small
lanterns
hung
in random places
some
by folks i knew
have
brought me safely
this
far on my way
i
remember the light
of
a small lantern hung
by
a grandfather who taught me
if
you can't work and talk
stop
talking, because farming
is
an unforgiving thing
i
remember the light
of
a small lantern hung
by
my own father
up
before the sun because
the
day's demands could not
be
put off, even if it meant
leaving
and coming home in the dark
i
remember the light
of
a small lantern hung
by
a teacher, like one you might know
who
smiled and said,
with
the greatest kindness
"you
can do better,
you
can be better"
putting
me back on course
i
remember the light
of
a small lantern hung
by
a stranger, who saw my need
and
quietly filled it, anonymously
i
could not say thank you,
but
i learned to do the same
i
remember the light
of
small lanterns hung
by
countless others who knew
that
leaving the smallest spark
can
rescue someone struggling in darkness
teaching
me that my inner glow
must
not be kept hidden
regret
is on the dessert menu
the
descriptions are hyped, as always—
nothing
actually tastes like heaven
or
hell or sex on the beach
(and
who's ever done that anyway?)
but
someone got paid to write this
to
make you want it, need it, badly
select
carefully from the following regrets
you'll
have a lifetime to live with your choice
"sweet
regret"
simmered
for decades in memory's tears
until
every hint of sorrow
is
reduced to caramel and cream.
you
will forget you ever wanted
things
to have been different
"regret
flambé"
served
as cold as revenge, surrounded
by
a moat of bitter kirsch
ready
to burn when you are
"regret
serpentine"
your
reptilian memories of 'could have been'
coiled
around a mound of recollections
beautifully
smooth, with an after-bite
to
die for
"regret
suprême"
all
your heaviest secrets
bathed
for years 'sous vide'
opened
tonight at your request
drizzled
with the distilled pain
you've
kept so carefully inside
waiting
for this moment to reveal
hovering between
philosophers,
poets, preachers, practitioners
can
all tell you that love is real, but none
can
tell you why or when, really, one
person
would say to another "i love you"
and
have any idea of what they mean. not one.
did
you know there are eight kinds of love?
myself,
i've known philia, friends without benefits,
eros,
romance constantly sought, seldom captured
ludus,
my newly-wed playmate until
mania
replaced her - possessive, obsessive
which
makes four, and four was enough
in
the end, all love was wild game
to
be hunted, bagged, devoured,
and
once devoured, gone.
until
you. you were the wild onions
i
gathered for soup on the hearth,
carefully
selecting the ones that shone
at
the bulb, that called "i am ready for you.
here.
now. come..." savory days,
but
gone with the first hard frost
hunt,
gather, gather, hunt, both drive me
until
i don't know which is worse—
being
alone or being lonely again,
inhaling
solitude, undisturbed, at peace
or
exhaling the void that screams "fill me"
what
drives me is an innate need
to
be seen, to be heard, to be held
in
the soft silence of all loves
to
know that i belong, not to,
but
with someone. mutual choice,
mutual
desire.
what
drives me, drives me mad, because
there
are no simple answers. i long
for
what i imagine, and i imagine loves
who
could be, but never are, who come
wrapped
in pretty lies, perverse notions
of
what i must do to prove, repeatedly,
that
love means giving in, not giving to,
finally
giving up
and
in that moment of realization,
angry
and bitter and resigned and relieved,
i
find myself trapped in love's contradictions—
the
promise of peace, the sorrow of longing
hovering
endlessly between
solitude
and loneliness
Jim Lewis (Pen name: j.lewis) is an internationally published poet, musician, nurse practitioner, and Editor of Verse-Virtual, an online journal and community. When he is not otherwise occupied, he is often on a kayak, exploring and photographing the waterways near his home in California. He has two full length collections and several chapbooks to his credit. www.jlewisweb.com/books.asp
“a clear day in october”
(poems and photos) is available directly from me.
“do you hear it?” (second collection of poetry) is available on Amazon.
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