Since COVID
the mall has all been emptied out,
but even before that the long hallways
branching off toward where Sears
or May Company had been were darkening,
casting into shadow those places
where thirty years ago
you were working out the complicated game
of flirting and with it, love.
You wonder how teenagers find each other now.
It has to do with cell phones and computers,
and from the outside it seems
that they’ve found a way to make sex
even lonelier than the anonymous bar pickup,
which is an achievement in its way.
You think you could hide in the cold darkness
of one of the back alleys inside a mall.
You think about how much darker and colder
it must feel for them, but love is still with
us.
You wish you could show them all
what love means, but you know
the last thing they need is you.
Grass Farm
The place down the road
used to be a farm
I think
maybe 50 years ago,
but the only thing
the owner grows
now is a grass lawn
maybe a quarter mile out
and across.
On Saturdays, he rides
his mower all morning,
all the way out to the back
to the treeline edge
fighting it back,
cutting down everything
including the sapling birches
that would swallow
his land back into the woods.
Sometimes on a weekday morning,
I’ll be down there
on a walk and look across
all that grass and spot a white tail deer
standing just on the edge of it,
looking too intimidated
by all that open space
to step out.
I know how it feels.
That field seems sacred
to the man on his mower.
The woodchucks
don’t venture out on it.
Neither do I or even the man
when he’s done with his weekly chore.
All the Way at the End of August
All morning long,
frogs have haikued themselves
into puddles along the trails
while my shoes have had
to slurp themselves free.
The highest birch leaves
breeze-quiver yesterday’s raindrops
onto the leaves below them,
but not all the way down to me.
The sunlight here has been filtered
through layers of leaves,
and my world is about as green as it gets.
Tomorrow there will be rain.
In a month, these leaves
will begin to autumn.
However, I’ve decided
to reside in this moment
for the rest of time.
They’ve All Gone Away Now
Out on a footpath along the Allegheny
I come to the remnants of the cabins
people used to drive to before they moved
the road maybe fifty years ago.
This place where my grandparents, father,
uncles, and aunts used to come
when they were all a young family.
They’re all gone now except for my father
who was the baby of that generation.
I wonder if he’d remember the place by
the half toppled-over chimney and foundation
stones. I wonder if he’d remember the stream
running by as the one he’d spent an afternoon
damming up when he was seven years old
and there was no one young enough to play
with.
I wonder if he’d recognize the descendants
of the frogs he caught or the smell of birch.
Later, I might call him, and talk to him
about this place, or maybe I won’t. Maybe
we’ll talk baseball or politics and I’ll let
the bucolic spaces of his long ago memory
hibernate quietly at the base of his skull,
feeding him, reminding him
that there are perfect spaces on this earth.
John Brantingham was
Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks’ first poet laureate. His work has been
featured in hundreds of magazines. He has nineteen books of poetry and fiction
including his latest, Life: Orange to Pear (Bamboo Dart Press). He lives in Jamestown, New York.
Beautiful work. I could see the white tail deer and smell the neighbor’s freshly cut lawn. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThank you!
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