Thursday, 8 December 2022

Four Poems by R. W. Stephens

 



Etienne

 

Waiting for Etienne

It is not like him to be late

not even fashionably

I wonder where he is

He may have forgotten the time

He has in the past

turned by a sweet for a little dinner.

We regularly meet here in the park

and share a bench

our private café

in the early evening

the lamps just turning on

Fireflies

 

Raining above our umbrellas

snow falling shadowing the lamps

as we talk

about this and that

our restaurant reviews books we are reading neighborhood gossip

And other things

catching up with each other’s lives

one story one at a time

Sharing our philosophies of Life

Vladimir and Estragon

 

He was to bring our hot coffee

dark and strong

A little sugar in mine

a little cream in his

He still has not arrived

No way to contact him

Estragon waiting for Godot

but the boy is lazy and does not show

 

I must leave our bench

twilight has fled

Hoping he had forgotten

the day the hour

Hoping he is dining

in a small quiet restaurant

being charming and gregarious

Hoping I will see him soon

And hear the tale (true or fanciful) of tonight

Godot always says he Is not coming

Etienne never does

 

 

Three Churches

 

Standing white, steepled, tall chimneys

On rolling high plains

Empty of people feeling betrayed

Ghosts

Void of reverence and faith

Congregations fled them

Scattering to survive

From a land bare of hope

Just a natural certainty

The land left to its own betrayal

Dust, wind, dry winters

 

Three churches

Catholic, Lutheran, Baptist

Different shades of belief

They could not keep faith from failing 

In a land that was faithless to them.

 

 

ANGST

 

Don’t write me your angst

Sitting in an alcove in a one bedroom apartment

In some suburb in California.

 

Write me your angst

Watching the sun rise from the ocean

In the Florida Keyes

In May, before the tropical heat sets in.

 

Write me your angst

Camping in the shadow

Of the mountains in the Virginias

In early fall, as Nature’s cloak changes.

 

Write me your angst

Driving the back roads

Among the corn fields of Iowa

In August before the harvest.

 

Write me your angst

Drinking a cold can of beer

Outside a small Wyoming town

Watching the stars wheel by in the heat of Summer.

 

Write me your angst

Driving across the salt flats

In Utah at four in the morning

In June, Venus high in the sky.

 

Write me your angst

Flying down the Interstate on a motorcycle

Through the flat lands of west Texas

In the dry and dusty fall. 

 

Don’t write me your angst of being alive

Write me your memories of being alive.

 

 

Ha'penny

 

It was there in a beat up old paper cigar box

Among other foreign coins of little value

A worthless dull worn bronze ha’penny

Portrait of the king when struck

The tales it must have to tell

Being found in a cigar box at an estate sale

In a country an ocean away

In a faster time.

 

How many pockets has it been in

Hidden at the bottom of a purse's dark cloth

With pence, a small kerchief and small other unimportant things

Lost and found

A talisman for an unfortunate chimney sweep

Given to him by his youngest daughter

Who found it in the street playing

A wish in Trevi Fountain for luck and love

by a young newlywed couple

On a quick romantic honeymoon to Rome

Sailing on the Canard line out of Bristol

Pocket change for a second class steward

On his first trip out

A souvenir for a young boy's treacherous pirate treasure

Waving a fearsome Peter Pan sword

Practicing for a duel with the prince of pirates

Just a curio for my collection of mundane foreign money

Chinese one yuan coin, Canadian beaver nickel, Mexican ten pesos coin.

 

The coin will come to someone

With an observant eye

And curiosity

The fables it will tell

Secretly to the curious and imaginative

Of a slower pace in another era.







R. W. Stephens is a native of California, born in San Francisco. Now living in Oakland across the bay. There was a sojourn to Wisconsin for university, then a return home with a BS in English. He has had an interesting life, from working in a nuclear power plant to making specialty contact lenses with a week in a rural village in central China in between. He has been published in Lothlorien Poetry Journal Anthology vol. 4 and 12 and Synchronized Chaos. He is the organizer and coordinator for a small writing group based in Hayward, California. “The future is never known, but is often filled with hope.” rws

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