The Then and Now of It
I went to clean my father’s tombstone
the other day.
Kneeling there a meadowlark’s sounds
came my way
and gave company to a gentle breeze
that tousled my hair,
along with a sunlight that enlivened
me there.
But my eyes teared while transfixed
upon the blackened stone,
and with scrub brush and water and
soap I washed it so
that its granite face sparkled aglow.
Slowly words were uttered there, words
like I miss you so,
words lost in the muted silence there
on the cemetery hill,
so that a fusion did occur in the air
in a slight chill.
I apologized in a prayer-like voice
the sadness of my guilt,
and I made a pact, in the silence
there, that true
diligence in the future I would prove.
Betrayal
The man accused of a heinous act
stands when the jurors enter,
his demeanour causes some in the courtroom
to think he is sociopathic-to-the-bone,
while others wonder about the act
that led to him standing, alone, there,
seemingly unrepentant to the degree that
it fires up anger in the hearts of some of those
beholders of the man’s fate, and when he sits
down in response to his defender’s gesture in
accordance with the proper courtroom decorum,
he glares over his shoulder at the jurors seated
off to the side, his eyes an admix of shadow and a fury
never before witnessed by many jurors,
his grimace a tokened threat delivered right
to the chinks in the hearts of those subpoenaed there,
those now in whose hands the accused life is, those
unfamiliar with the man’s existence, his back alley ways
and lead-poisoning, his single mother upbringing and gang
initiation and acceptance to the newfound lifestyle there
in the war zones his childhood endured, the what the fuck
lack of hope that courses through his veins now, the nightmares
in the blackest of black.
Cosmos
I admire wildflowers
They bloom
bold,
Often with
brazen
Displays of
colour.
I especially
cherish
The fact
that they
Burst forth
in full bloom,
Unaffected
by the war
Pandemics
wage on
Humanity as
if we,
On the grand
scale
Of things,
don’t matter
That much
anyway. And,
Come to
think, the follies
Of humankind
have ravaged
Our planet,
and the flowers
Have not.
Telegram
Sometimes the river is calm with a
glassy smile,
but when it imbibes too much thunder
rain,
it becomes nasty-tongued and curses
its riverbed with sloshy slung mud
and river flood, cracks levees
with the force of its flow and its
reckless
mindset, one that some struggle
to explain away with physics, but I
suspect
that somewhere beyond that
science-faced
rationale there is still one tough
God-of-Havoc
trying again and again to tell us
something
supremely vital and raw.
Voyages
I watch from my hotel balcony
as a sailboat in the distance
sails its course under a radiant,
powder-blue sky on the great Tagus River
whose shoreline laps the enchanting
city of Lisbon.
Its sails are billowed with enough wind
to cut through the sea-like river inlet
from which Vasco Da Gama voyaged
in caravels fitted and funded
by the Portuguese Crown ages
before this tranquil scene below —
the magical seven hills of this city
of Calçada portuguesa and coloured
walls now kissed passionately
by Fado sounds throughout its narrow,
cobblestoned streets singing its
paradoxical blend of despair
and hope.
In the distance, the sailboat seems to trace
the sea explorer’s path off into the blazing sun.
Stephen
Anderson is a Milwaukee poet and translator whose work has appeared in Southwest
Review, Latin American Literature Today, Verse Wisconsin, Foundling Review,
Twist In Time, Tipton Poetry Journal, New Purlieu Review, Free Verse, Poetica
Review, Life And Legends, Blue Heron Speaks, Amsterdam Quarterly, as well
as in numerous other print and online journals. He was the recipient of the
First Place Award in the Wisconsin Fellowship Of Poets 2005 Triad Contest, and
he received an Honorable Mention in the WFOP’s 2016 Chapbook Contest. Many of
his poems have been featured on the Milwaukee NPR affiliate WUWM Lake Effect
Program. Anderson is the author of three chapbooks, as well as three
full length collections, In the Garden of Angels and Demons (2017) and The
Dream Angel Plays The Cello (2019,) and High Wire (late 2021.} In
the summer of 2013, six of his poems formed the text for a chamber music song
cycle entitled The Privileged Secrets of the Arch performed by some
musicians from the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra and an opera singer. Anderson’s
work is being archived in the Stephen Anderson Collection in the Special
Collections Section of the Raynor Libraries at Marquette University.
Stephen, I see you occasionally on FB. These poems are exquisite! Thanks for sharing. Marsha Owens
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