CRANE
--You grey many-symboled bird,
O killer of murderous snakes.
Listen!
Trying to keep their spirits up
these cold, these weary, these hungry doomed soldati
sing their mournful Zhuravli*
At times I feel the casualties
of battle never really died.
Their buried flags are flying V's.
They became cranes unfurled in flight.
The cold, the weary, the hungry, the doomed
sing the paean to their Great Patriotic War fallen
not knowing they sing their own prophecy
as they ravage their way blindly
through the countryside and out.
The wars of long ago are not
so long ago. The cranes still cry.
The air is filled with fire and shot.
Low moans and shrieks shatter the skies.
Crane -- you listen and recall.
Kyiv had indeed once been freed
by their very grandpas.
And now they seek to enslave it again.
The cranes still flap in formation
through the twilights and through the mists.
A line break, an indication
I'll fill that vacancy we missed.
Crane -- you stand for freedom,
honour, prestige, supreme military dignity.
Sorrow for a motherland.
And longevity! But also sacrifice.
And so the day will surely come
when I take my place in the gap
and you'll hear my birdwings hum from
where I left you there on the map.
Crane -- you sound your trumpet.
You stand tall and upright in Dnieperland.
Be like your cousin cranes,
the guardians of Midir's gates
who stripped away the courage
of the battle-bound warriors
who passed their way.
Feel pity for the soldati
even as you punish them.
*”Cranes,” popular Russian song by Rasul Gamzatov
and Yan Frenkels
Courage is not just the medal,
and love not the ring.
Our identities transcend our
organs, nerves, and bones.
No ideas, no concepts, are
ever concrete things,
and neither are the handsome
words by which they are known.
The world we see is made of
steel, stone, plastic, glass, wood,
material structures made of
molecules, atoms,
nucleons, hadrons, quarks,
firmions, and other coulds
and shoulds (names await
definition of a datum).
We preside over realms of rebars and 2X4s
but we're subjects of shadow monarchs called metaphors.
I found a dime
by the railroad track.
It was old and grey
bent, dull,
worthless.
The tail was battered,
the head worn and blank.
We were minted
the same year.
and beginnings end and ends begin.
eternities move ahead and back.
our present is our time to butcher
before the now determines our fast.
in the spot between gone and again
all whitenesses contain shades of black.
some poets remember the future
and other poets create the past.
DON'T YOU REMEMBER?
antigrav daydream swimming
timeless buzzbrain grins
rhymes of elusive elucidation
and dizzying distraction --
isn't that what being in love
was like?
And, alas, time's the
effective scrubber
of the festive infestation.
Duane Vorhees lives in Thailand after teaching in Japan and Korea for many years. He was raised in Ohio and received his PhD in American Culture Studies from Bowling Green State University. Hog Press of Ames, iowa, recently published tree collections of his poetry, THE MANY LOVES OF DUANE VORHEES, GIFT: GOD RUNS THROUGH ALL THESE ROOMS, and HEAVEN.
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