Monday, 15 May 2023

Three Poems by Antonia Alexandra Klimenko

 



Kaleidoscope

                                                  

                                                                               

Picture yourself on a boat on a river

With tangerine trees and marmalade skies

Somebody calls you, you answer quite slowly,

A girl with kaleidoscope eyes

--John Lennon               

 

For years  now   I have been preparing for the journey–

heart sealed as tight as a drum

eyelids pulled down like shades

 

Sleep does not come easy

to an old child

who cannot be tied to a bed

whose mind    even when weighted down by centuries

only floats to the ceiling

like a moon on helium without a string

 

I have tried putting my foot down

I have thrown up my hands in despair–-

But still   I rise   I rise

and float upward…

 

I am circling myself as I myself

am being encircled by the Unnamed

like a halo   or a blessing.

I am light   a spectrum of light

fingers filtering through the branches of trees

a shimmering screen suspended

a universe of dilating skeyes—

impressionable pupils that take in everything 

 

I am circling myself   as I myself          

am being encircled—a face slowly turning

reflecting the green of the fields below--

Consider the lilies   it whispers

Eyes closing and opening like windows

onto bright tulips   Irises blooming    blossoming.

bulbs exploding like crocus into untold dimensions

        

(Who knows

where I have been–-

what I have seen

when I wasn’t looking)

 

I am the sea   now   with the sun sinking under me              

and all my cells are singing

Wave upon wave                                                            

I wash away like a dream or a watercolour

I pour myself into the river

I am the river   turning and returning–                       

a cool delirium in a clear stream of consciousness–    

my boat brimming over with glass fish

 

I   Eternal Spring…                       

am traveling light

am traveling blind–-

tears beading on my cheeks like crystals

then falling back into themselves

dissolving into their sequential

magical magnetic moment

of synchronistic being

turning    turning

into the pattern of snowflake–-

a mere blink in the kaleidoscopic eye

 

It is an old pattern with a new twist-- 

an ancient rite of passage

 

I am floating upward   out of my body   drifting

to a place where everything has happened before

and is about to   again    for the very first time

 

 Like postcards I send to myself–-

 I wish I were here

 I wish I were here

 

 

Green



were the days of my unripened youth —
the years I spent in envious pursuit   
of happiness
Green  Green
the colour of Spring
a call to life 
the joy that would sing
in my heart
when you    sprang to mind

Green
were the promises    I made
the fibs the stories    you forgave
the imagined forests   in which we got lost 
the flowerbeds    we rolled and tossed in
the branches    that set us apart

Green
were the fields   the valleys
of highs and lows —
blanket of comfort 
blanket of sorrow 
How deep was my grave 
once you were gone —
this young heart breaking
with each new dawn

Green
the scent   of memories that linger
that climb like vines 
that grow like fingers
Leaves that whisper to the wind —
the moon growing pale
the moon growing thin

Time . . . time . . . time . . . letting go
  

 

 

Old Friends    

 

Every Spring I unearth them--

those chiffon silks   these butterfly wings

in their unfurling dark kimonos

the old notebooks

in their unmarked graves

the dried geraniums

that survived the winter

the old friend 

who didn't

 

Every Spring

I say hello to things

and people to whom

I once said goodbye

Moving backward 

I step forward

into a new pattern

in which I am

with only my eyes

unable to fully open

in which I am

with all my senses

able to blindly trust

 

Whoever planted

the earth    the sun   the stars

the seeds from which all blessings grow

the silver tears of meteors that fall like dew

the spring rain wet with promise--

Who tills these thoughts in my fertile head

knew all too well

you cannot harvest 

what you do not sow

 

What is lost from year to year

glances back on us--

passes through our fragile glass--

their mirror into ours

Passes through

as light  as dust

as Memory's  smoke and shadow

 

Outside my unframed window                                              

the moon is melting   trembling 

as white as snow--                                    

as liquid as these timeless hours

I bow to kiss the sky  

my feet are planted on

I blossom in the wisdom

of what    I come to know





Antonia Alexandra Klimenko was first introduced on the BBC and to the literary world by the legendary James Meary Tambimuttu of Poetry London–-publisher of T.S. Eliot, Dylan Thomas, Henry Miller and Bob Dylan, to name a few.  After his death, it was his friend, the late great Kathleen Raine, who took an interest in her writing and encouraged her to publish.  

A nominee for the Pushcart Prize, The Best of the Net, and a former San Francisco Poetry Slam Champion, she is widely published. Her work has appeared in (among others) XXI Century World Literature (which she represents France) and Maintenant : Journal of Contemporary Dada Writing and Art archived at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. and New York’s Museum of Modern Art. 

She is the recipient of two grants: one from Poets in Need, of which Michael (100 Thousand Poets for Change) Rothenberg is a co-founder; the second—the 2018 Generosity Award bestowed on her by Kathleen Spivack and Joseph Murray for her outstanding service to international writers through SpokenWord Paris where she is Writer/ Poet in Residence.  

Her collected poems On the Way to Invisible is forthcoming in 2023. 

 

 

 

 

 


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