reservoir
brown snow in the gutters
ashen skies flagging over
the choppy waters
her
face will freeze soon
folded inside myself
jagged bits healing beneath
salt scabs hardening my cheeks
the
delicacy of icicles
London, 1940
the bombs fell into the shadowed places,
the darkened homes with black curtains
drawn,
until the horizon caught fire;
underground the earth shook,
children wailed and mothers wept
as bits of London fell to flame;
St. Paul’s Cathedral stood amidst the
inferno,
flickering orange colouring the underbellies
of clouds,
while onward pressed the sombre Thames;
morning arrived with funeral grey
austerity,
the newly homeless picked through skeletons
of smouldering neighbourhoods;
mourning victims and praising heroes,
waiting patiently for the smoke to clear,
the wounds to heal, the pain to subside.
Lillian
i.
had it, in fact, passed her by;
or had she
folded
it up for safekeeping –
placed it tenderly
between the pages of the family bible
or
some old Dickens volume
like the four-leaf clovers
she used to find skirting the meadow;
no,
no,
even if she had tried to preserve it
it would have eluded her,
snuck
out with that awful cat
or accidentally swept out the patio door
one
fall afternoon;
she collects her yesterdays, now,
mindful
of the fact she has forgotten
what exactly she is waiting for,
deteriorating a little more each day
until she does not recognize her visitors
and
time itself unweaves,
leaves itself frayed around the edges
ii.
Lillian left us long ago, now,
and
we had to gather up her belongings,
pieces of a puzzle that will never fit
again;
the memory detaches itself as years
accumulate
and
dust settles
the residue of life collects
in layers of sediment
gradually
forgetting everything
but the faded cues
Lautrec
You were Paris compacted,
made vivid and colourful.
You were provincial gardens by day;
frenzied cabarets by night.
In the Moulin Rouge,
in Chat Noir and the Divan Japonais,
you alone found humble dignity,
You alone captured unintentional elegance.
You divulged this equitable truth
in delicate brushstrokes,
in the composition of unique expressions
or in the uncanny depiction of motion
upon static canvas.
White Goddess
Outside,
winter
casts her hoary shadow:
an
early frost swathes
the ill-prepared
earth,
and the dogwood berries are all too
plentiful
on the slopes this year
The Oak Moon shivers,
her
frozen tears
form
icicles on balsam boughs
bowing
beneath the howling gales,
already she has grown weary,
and the nights keep getting longer.
Lee Clark Zumpe,
an entertainment columnist with Tampa Bay Newspapers, earned his bachelor’s in
English at the University of South Florida. He began writing poetry and fiction
in the early 1990s. His work has regularly appeared in a variety of literary
journals and genre magazines over the last two decades. Publication credits
include Tiferet, Zillah, The Ugly Tree, Modern Drunkard Magazine, Red
Owl, Jones Av., Main Street Rag, Space & Time, Mythic Delirium and Weird
Tales.
Lee lives on the
west coast of Florida with his wife and daughter. Visit www.leeclarkzumpe.com.
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