Saturday, 1 April 2023

Five Poems by Joseph A Farina

 



manifest destiny

 

I look at ghosts on youtube

families frozen in the fifties

in vivid kodachrome film

bulbous TV sets in background

ashtrays on tables, in cars

cocktails on coasters

in suits and dresses

at dining room tables

around aluminum Christmas trees

gifts in profusion beneath them

cigarettes in hand 

glasses lifted in forever cheers

jet finned cars promising

a Buck Rodgers future

children at school, hands on hearts

pledging allegiance to their flag

duck and cover drills

yes sir, yes mam followed the rules

in pretty pink houses

full of made in USA appliances

the electric dream of ease

the embodiment of 

the whitebread middle class 

American dream

blessed by the hand of the god

in which they trusted

 

 

Behind closed doors

 

Cities full of  people

All alone

Neighbourhoods  full of houses

Everyone home

Churches without praying

Sacraments silenced

Everyone gone behind doors

 

Faces looking out windows

Full of sorrow

Everyone on furlough

Worrying about debt 

Hopes hinged on freedom

Promised maybe In the middle of june

Everyone gone behind doors

 

Once life was open

Once spring's warmth was a sign

That everyone could join in the sun

They could drive in their cars

Tops down to the air

Sit beside each other 

embraced without care

Now  gloved hands and masked lips

Stay safe behind doors

No visits no gatherings no trips

Everyone waiting behind their closed doors

 

 

through rose coloured eyes

 

the lost poetry of these streets

returns in spring's canopy 

old houses, renew in its light

scents of all things green caress me

forgotten voices whisper in breezes

they call to each other and me

echoing  forgotten memories 

hard days and harder nights

transformed by time and nostalgia

into sunlit joy and acceptance

on streets that were never mine

the only poetry within myself

born of pain and desperation 

my armour and shield to protect me

 

 

streets of shade, sidewalks of silence

 

went walking back

early this morning,

back to my streets

of memory, in the shadow

of the cathedral 

looking for something

echoes of someone

pressing on my mind,

past the houses of classmates

that were charitable

but not really friends

houses well appointed then

bigger than i had ever seen

in those years i left behind

there was no one on the sidewalks

no ghosts peeking out from windows

no voices in this early hour

only my footsteps 

whistling songs

of early days,

wishing I could remember less

and forgive more

 

 

 evensong

 

 the silence of houses

 whispers loudest at dusk

 seethes through locked doors

 yellow lighted windows

 exposing the cobwebs inside...

 

 thralled, i kneel in pale shadows

 until the whispers lose their voice

 and the silence becomes me

 without keys, without light -

 waiting for the darkness

 to capture my mouth

 and swallow my eyes, as

 the evensong preys

 through the houses




Joseph A Farina is a retired lawyer in Sarnia, Ontario, Canada. An award winning poet. published in  Quills Canadian Poetry Magazine, Ascent ,Subterranean  Blue  and in   The Tower Poetry Magazine, Inscribed, The Windsor Review, Boxcar Poetry Revue , and appears in the anthologies   Sweet Lemons: Writings with a Sicilian Accent,  Canadian Italians at Table,  Witness  and Tamaracks: Canadian Poetry for the 21st Century .  published in U.S. magazines   Mobius, Pyramid Arts, Arabesques, Fiele-Festa, Philadelphia Poets and   Memoir and in Silver Birch Press  Series. He has had two books of poetry published— The Cancer Chronicles   and   The Ghosts of Water Street.

 


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