Osuna
Legs outstretched
Arms akimbo
Osuna strides
through the village
As she has from
the dawn of time
In the Beginning
Place
When she hears the
djembe drums
Her heart beats
with pride
She remembers the
salt spray
Against her face
The ocean’s tears
could not quench her thirst
Even as too-strong
arms bore her to the New World
Where she stands
resilient
Tall like tamarind
trees
Provoked by
centuries of storms
Brighter than the
moonlit night
Rising above the
darkness
Of the land and secret
hearts
Pouring forth her
guardian light
The Roots of Trees
Guard their feelings beneath thickened skin
Pock-marked by blights and storms
Natural and unnatural
I cannot say with certainty
If forest memories ebb and flow
Through their xylem and phloem
Only to accumulate at last
In emotional dendrochronology
But I want to believe
I do as the hillside elders do
When I protect my heartwood
In times of distress
Their longing roots plunge deeper
Awash in emerald oxytocin
That drives them even through rock
Toward the least they need to survive
Like the gnarled giants
I have weathered loss of face and dignity
And near loss of mind in my time
Yet it comforts me to think
Love burrows on like the roots of trees
Hummingbird Days
First my friend’s
hummingbird
Captured by an
alert camera in the morning light
Feathers tinted
like the phantasmagoric rainbow
Fanned across the
Florentine ceiling
Of the Castillo de
Sammezzano
Then another two-dimensional
bird
Announcing those
long-listed for an award that shares its name
Suddenly I have
seen two colibris within minutes
Where I have seen
none in the back garden for days
Their coats
iridescent
Like the nacre
mouth of the fluted vase
Perched atop the
organ my mother played at bedtime
Feathers folded
like unruly praying hands
Perfectly
disorganized in the way of dry stone walls
As if to help
weather their tiny tectonic storms
Perhaps the hummingbirds
have come to take me home
To the memory of
my childhood yard
Technicolor
wind-up toys
Colourful kin to
the kaleidoscope I craved
As I splashed in
shiny puddles in the summer driveway
Spectra arced so
kindly across the asphalt
Despite
unpromising circumstances
Passing as quickly
as the micro-beats of wings
Rainbow Country
When the first
drops land on the windshield of my commute
I become a menace
on these tropical roads
Not because the
asphalt aquaria fill to overflowing
Or the coastal
road through Mullet Bay
Suddenly welcomes
kayaks but deters a little Nissan
Or the hillside
has been known to hill-slide into my backyard
In cahoots with
Big Mama Irma
The matriarch of
climatic mayhem
But because I am
known to be sunny
Storms bring the
chance to top up my cup
Ever half-full and
expectant
Like the suede dog
Parked on the back
shelf of my aunt’s sedan
Head a-swivel with
every bump of every childhood trip
I have one hand
for the wheel and one for the camera
I am looking for
rainbows
You Have Never Seen the Ocean
Is it true, love
You have never
seen the ocean
You come from an
ancient land
Locked away from
the sea
Where the first
hunters roamed
In waist-high
grass
And climbed for
days
To the tops of
cloud-wreathed mountains
Now you stand on
the edge of a new land
Birthed from
ancient volcanic hips
Cradled in the
waves
Where the first
fishers dove through spindrift
To forage plains
of turtle grass
Is it true, love
You have never
seen the ocean
Run beside her
with languid steps
Out-racing
footprints indelible
Only for the time
between the crests
That endlessly
erase the shore
Seen the Sun
caress the horizon
Strewing rubies
and diamonds
That dissolve into
the sea
With a flash of
phosphorescent green
Is it true, love
You have never
seen the ocean
Plunged beneath
the waves
To bathe in a
timeless caress
And leaped through
the surface
Your smile
effervescent
As you raise your
chin
Your mighty locks
flinging
Prismatic
water-fans
Into the luminous
moonset
Is it true, love
You have never
seen the ocean
Here you will
write windswept poems
Breathing in the
salty exhalations
Of our restless
mother
By night the stars
will crown my hair
Candelabrum around
my head
Shining on our
table in the sand
Where we dine on
each other
Long and lingering
feast
As Aldebaran and
Rigel arc across the sky
And the waves kiss
our bare feet
Is it true, love
You have never
seen the ocean
Marianne Tefft is a poet and lyricist who daylights as a Montessori teacher on the Dutch Caribbean Island of Sint Maarten. Her work is infused with love, moonlight and the rhythms of tropical life. Her poems appear in print and online journals and anthologies in Canada, the U.S., India, Serbia and Sint Maarten. She is the author of the poetry collections Full Moon Fire: Spoken Songs of Love (June 2022) and Moonchild: Poems for Moon Lovers (coming in December 2022).
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