The
Lament of Heloise
So deep in the
labyrinth of my heart
echoes of your
voice leave a joyous sound.
Not even the pain
of when we had to part
compels me to
regret the love we found.
Within the
cloister walls your face I see
as if somehow you
penetrate through stone,
I feel your strong
arms encircling me
in the halcyon
hours we spent alone.
I am not marble
since I took the veil,
with me your
tender words ever remain.
Regardless of the
past, they cannot fail
the tumult of our
senses to sustain.
Cruelly separated
in life were we;
husband, let our
graves near each other’s be!
The Pattee Mall- Center of my Universe
While shedding my
youth I walked on the Mall
past the iron
grill, many-stoned obelisk
to the library
steps,. There rested my world.
At times savouring my pipe,
holding hands tentatively,
laughing with friends, dreaming dreams.
Over the arched elms
alongside the paths
colourful flowers
graced the green spaces
except when winter
whitened ev’rything.
My Underwood typewriter,
at microphone, ON AIR sign,
discussing literature.
Perfecting my
radio voice, searching
for connections in
all I was learning,
Proteus-like
evolving,
From keg to class a-going,
writing verse in green notebooks,
a Baudelaire in training.
Days learning
another tongue, nights lurching
towards a vision
more mirage than lucid,
Prematurely
leaving what I knew well.
Then reading damning, faint praise
I pivoted to the south
vision now reality.
Several times walking
the Mall not as the
long-haired
radical lad wanting to read
works of the
living, tilting at windmills.
Ev’ry so often I reflect on those
long-ago times on the Mall,
center of my universe
Often in motion I Remember Him- for AT
Often in motion I
remember him;
Playing catch
before sunset, hammering
countless nails,
fishing from Canada then
closer to home, in
open hearth’s heat as
steel emerged in
glowing red-hot grandeur.
In retirement,
then I see him sitting
explaining
strategy on the kitchen
table cleared of
dishes, late afternoons
with a mug of tea and Mogen David
or savouring the
dippy bread that would
shorten his days
with each grease-drenched slice.
Sadly it was not
granted him to see,
like Aeneas, the
proud descendants that
his roving younger
son grafted onto
the family tree, or how his skills jumped
to the grandson he
never got to know.
By Arthur Turfa
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