Dribs & Drabs of This & That
I
have seen all life pass before me.
I
have seen the crowning of the jewels.
Time
walks on tortured tiptoes, through
dessert
sands. Ego / a peacock strut.
Open
your book and turn the page.
Words
are always changing. Grab a handful
of
crumbs, before the story ends. We cannot
answer
a question if it has not been asked.
Gossip
floats above a cornsilk sky, as we
grapple
for signs of truth. Always wandering,
always
seeking.
Knock knock, who’s there?
Sanctuary
Seeking
safety / seeking promise,
I
walked a thousand miles. Deserts,
rivers,
forests, compelled to impede
me.
Towering edifices stare me down.
Geoglyphs
point the way. Pain / a
constant
companion. I plant my flag
in
barren soil, while digging deep for
the
well of hope. A small bird sings
her
sweet tune. A foreboding black
shadow
swoops down upon her.
Darkness
pulls me in. You are no
longer
here with me. I search for
substance
& for love. There is a thesis
here,
buried in the sand. Come walk
with
me & hold my hand. I am the
mother
who lost her child. I am the
last survivor, pleading for sanctuary.
My
Brother’s Keeper
You
sit on the roof at night asking questions,
trying
to solve mysteries of the universe.
But
my brain doesn’t work like that.
I
watch you with rapt curiosity while shaking my head.
The
heavens sing you a song I cannot hear,
it
is only for you.
Staring
deeply into the dark void,
you
know things no one else will ever understand.
You
build a picket fence
around
the moon with your mind,
and
arrange the planets in your garden,
burying
them deep in a primordial soup.
e=
mc2 is etched upon your soul.
Savant
or saint, I know not which,
but
you see truths beyond the ages.
I
am too afraid to reach out and touch you
for
fear that some strange energy
will
render me immobile.
I
cannot save myself.
I
cannot save you.
The
chill of the winter night fills your lungs
and
exhales a dream.
Frozen
mist forms a halo around your raven hair.
What
is it that you seek?
You
in your solitary wonderment,
not
letting anyone else in,
not
even me.
* Published by The Scribe Magazine, January 2021
My
Garden
It
is easy to forget you,
the
way you stand there
looking
lost among the daisies.
Blossoms
sprouting from every pore.
Your
black eyes, now as empty seeds.
You
never really tried to grow
outside
the trellised wall.
You
clung like some lost vision of
green
lizards and snakes.
But
who am I to blame,
when
blaming is on call?
I
knew better than to
plant
you deep within my heart.
Now
as autumn is at hand
and
butterflies take wing,
your
dying petals disperse
to
the four winds.
* Received 1st Honorable Mention in the Gideon Review Poetry Prize, December 2019
Born of war and
hunger -
a stolen youth
ripped from earth.
Lost within a
vanquished spring
as winter counted days.
Black eyes - a
raven’s call
follow what cannot
be seen,
vagrant visions, dark to light.
Tortured flesh,
his inheritance
passed on to each of us, in turn.
A buried past -
sunken deep,
the depths of which
are unknown.
We
played with death
as
little toy soldiers marched.
In
fear
we
hid ourselves from him.
Asking
for more than he could give,
a
pathway to the sun.
His
childhood our childhood,
repeating
the mantra
never love.
Not
knowing how to be a father, husband, son, brother …
he only knew how to die.
He
was war and hunger,
writing his own epilog.
* Published by POETiCA Review, April 2021
Ann Christine Tabaka was nominated for the 2017 Pushcart Prize in Poetry. She is the winner of Spillwords Press 2020 Publication of the Year, her bio is featured in the “Who’s Who of Emerging Writers 2020 and 2021,” published by Sweetycat Press. She is the author of 14 poetry books. lives in Delaware, USA. She loves gardening and cooking. Chris lives with her husband and four cats. Her most recent credits are: Sparks of Calliope; The Closed Eye Open, Poetic Sun, Tangled Locks Journal, Wild Roof Journal, The American Writers Review, The Scribe Magazine, The Phoenix, Burningword Literary Journal, Muddy River Poetry Review, The Silver Blade, Pomona Valley Review, West Texas Literary Review, The Hungry Chimera, Sheila-Na-Gig, Fourth & Sycamore.
Fabulous poetry.
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