My
Mother as Warrior for God
My
mother leans into work the way she
would
a lover. To ready for Sunday School
she
dips dark hair into a bun. Rests with precise balance
bare
and simple pearls on clavicle.
Her
suit is the colour of nest stealing jays,
lips
alive with crimson, hemmed skirt, long legs.
I
watch her in the mirror, fingers wedged
around
a cigarette and match flare.
She
is ready to walk among men, ready
to
refuse the looks they bring.
Her
purpose is to draw out the children, the quiet ones.
Soon
she will kneel before their sweet
and
milky songs. Soon they will be laughing
and
dancing. They will make a line and lift
their
arms to each other’s shoulders
bluebirds
in and out of windows.
Their
curled fists are springtime
fiddleheads
waiting to be chosen, newborn.
Saratoga Racetrack
In
the middle of the night
my
father pulls near Union Street
on
Saratoga’s east side.
The
back of our grey station wagon
holds
a lumpy mattress
where
my sisters and I,
all
fists and limbs, entwine
and
try to sleep but the odd feel
of
still being in our clothes
and
also on a busy road makes us too
exposed
to the passing shadows of headlights
glaring
and the thick low thump of tires.
We
park alongside bars and nightclubs.
Footsteps
outside our windows.
Who
but grown-ups stay out so late
and
why would our parents think this safe —
We
watch nighthawks migrate, night shift workers
in
Carhart’s emerge from factories.
We’re
waiting to see horses train at 6 a.m.,
manes
brushed bright with curry combs.
Imprinted
foals in pasture will grow to love
the
human voice that instructs. First halter breaking
then
ground training then the discipline.
Our
parents tell us to pull white mohair sweaters
over
our yellow pedal pushers
then
we tumble into the 24-hour diner.
Uncombed,
dishevelled, barely awake
we
late night children order
warm
and sticky sweet buns, pancakes and eggs.
We
touch everything, giddy, banging
on
our booth’s polished, aluminum.
We
run to spin the swivelling counter stools
of
red Naugahyde. The waitress’s look
tells
my father this is no place for children.
Before
sunup with our Instamatics strapped
to
our wrists, our long hair flying behind us
we
balance on the fence’s lowest rung,
legs
angled forward,
eyes
ahead, on the starting gate.
My Mother on the Soccer Field
My
mother sits down in the grass at half-time.
Next
to her is my father and their neighbour, whose husband
walked
out after crashing the Mercedes.
They
eat whole avocados with large bites, ravenous.
They
are not taking nibbles, not slicing off small bits
to
put on crackers with a cheese knife, no.
My
parents are chomping on avocados as if they are apples.
Just
then the wind picks up. My mother brushes back her hair
The
neighbour sighs and I am witness to shameless, delirious
happiness.
It’s the 1960’s. The Bay of Pigs is over. Kennedy is dead.
Sputnik
long ago orbited and crashed over Wisconsin,
and
my picnicking bohemians wait
for
the rest of the game to begin.
After Fifty
After fifty, dinner parties are easy.
Nothing
burns, meat gets braised,
Your
hands know to gently whisk
swirls
of Dijon into mayonnaise.
After fifty you know your oven well.
There’s
no need to adjust the racks.
You
don’t need a timer; you’re relaxed.
After fifty, all that could go wrong already did.
The
silver comes out, it goes back in.
Platters
might shatter but all is short-lived.
When
stiff or sore or scorched
you
can sit back and take a drink
slowly
mixing and breathing
in
the raspberry, rhubarb cream.
After
fifty, you know what’s important
and
what to say and that it’s all right
for
silence to descend like a king
demanding
loyalty of his subjects
who
know the sweetness of a shared bitterness.
What once seemed too much no longer is.
After
fifty, you raise your glass to all that’s good
for
all the brokenness of the past
and
transmutations of your various selves.
You
know your spouse is just your spouse.
You
can add a little pepper or a little salt
to
the wounds but all their faults are also yours.
There
is forgiveness and dessert and a world
within
the world and a place to rest far from
the
distant glimmer that endures.
Lost FootagE
Weekends
found our neighbour Elaine
in
her parent’s living room
where
none of her parochial
charges
could reach her
with
their untied oxfords
and
smells of chalk and glue.
While
perched in an easy chair
afternoons
slipped into worn grooves.
She
watched black and white movies,
frame
by granular frame,
the
soundtrack crackling.
Sometimes
there was popcorn,
an
extra pillow or a bathrobe
and
compulsory slippers.
She
snorted when endings were obvious
smirked
at DAR-like actresses,
ignorant
ingénues, who puckered
and
trilled over Bakelite phones.
She
abandoned herself to the obsolete
as
if she still loved the world
outside
her window even if she never looked.
It
was the height of the 60’s.
We
still ate fish on Fridays
and
her brother hadn’t yet tripped
into
the merciless jungles of Vietnam.
Unmarried,
where else was there to be
but
in the interval, the commercial —
switching
channels.
Here
she was queen, critic, goddess
to
all she knew and all she cared to know
of
that odd, bluish light-glow
to
which we were all obedient.
Elisabeth Weiss teaches writing at Salem State
University in Salem, MA. She’s taught poetry in preschools, prisons, and
nursing homes, as well as to the intellectually disabled. She’s worked in the
editorial department at Harper & Row in New York and has an MFA from
The University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop. She’s published poems in London’s
Poetry Review, Porch, Crazyhorse, the Birmingham Poetry Review, the Paterson
Literary Review and many other journals. Lis won the Talking Writing Hybrid
Poetry Prize for 2016 and was a runner up in the 2013 Boston Review poetry
contest.
Today is a Beautiful Indian Summer day in Northeast France ( Moselle ). Such words written with thoughtful emotion are soothing and complete this beautiful fall day. Congratulations !!
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