Sunday, 30 June 2024

Five Poems by Rachel Landrum Crumble

 



There is a Circuit for Sadness


linking memory to emotion,

hippocampus to amygdala,

head to heart.


Mine is a strong but faulty current

I learn now. Sometimes the synapses

flicker and go dark,

like a satellite map of  Midwestern towns

at 2 a.m.: no traffic light, and the odd

porch light or street light

as far apart as fireflies floating

the deserted highway.


This circuit is more the cold ache

of the Aleutian current

than the bathwater of the Gulf Stream.


Some people’s neural circuits light up

like Manhattan at 2 a.m., but

I am that insomniac

back in that Midwestern town,

sitting on a porch swing.


The moon is large and rides the flat horizon.

I can think in such quiet, with only an echo

of a coyote’s distant bark against the barn.



“Each man is a half opened door

leading to a room for everyone”

Tomas Transtromer


Some are double bolted with bars

on a storm door. The loved and hated

inside are prisoners.


Some are blown off, so wind

and rain and vermin come and go—

no more a shelter than a lean-to,

addicts lean against the walls,

curl up in squalor, recognizing no one.


Some are French doors, admitting

morning light, the people within

drink coffee and wake

like swimmers coming up for air.


Some are Plexiglas storm doors

with brass handles. Smudged glass

gives the impression of transparency.

Plastic runners through white-carpeted rooms

welcome no one, the thermostat

a year-round 65 degrees.


Some are scarred but beautiful,

solid oak, uneven stain and raw grain,

the original inside handle replaced

with a crystal knob. The people come and go—

loved, stifled, launched.


 

Lessons on Loss in January


An arthritic oak

wears a tattered skirt

of last year’s leaves.

            Sometimes old grief is ugly and vain.


Two century old yellow maples

grew up together so close

they fused above the roots.

Now one remains, strong and wounded

a bald spot at the base

where lightning blew them apart,

felling the other.

            We survive loss.


A row of red cedars, branches

touching like children’s clasped hands

playing Red Rover, is a strong shelter

against cruel wind.

            Hold hands, and bend.


Yet merciful wind strips high branches

on poplar trees even of loss.

How can Spring’s yellow-green buds appear

without winter blasts that pry those last

dead leaves loose?


Their dark beauty against a changing

palette of sky is its own stark victory.

            Let go.


In January, nocturnal roots

hold fast to the earth in freeze

and thaw, secretly incubating Spring.

            Trust the unseen.


Deciduous trees, like aging starlets,

die from the inside out.

Conifers die from the outside in.

            Leave me my heartwood.

            I am evergreen.


 

Surreality


Here land is sea and sea is land.

I am rocked to sleep each night

and swim the sky across dry oceans.


Down is up and up is down,

so when I am depressed I fly,

when happy, dance the liquid land.


It is virtuous to sleep at sunrise

and wake well after noon, since

day is night and night is day,


Insomniacs walk well-lit museums

of empty streets. Only 24-hour diners

and all-night groceries are filled with

dazed somnambulists wearing shades.


Our waking hours are lit with party lights.

Whole populations of birds lost

to the false promise of luminous cities,

forget their yearly migrations.

When they die, their feathers are the seeds

of a new species.


After death, humans come back, perennials

in spring, in time for Mother’s and Father’s Day,

make amends, or testify

at their own murder trials, vacation

in summer, then fade away in fall.


The world itself grows prodigious

as a cabbage in a bright Alaskan summer.

There is room for all. We fly with no luggage,

no planes. Instead of highways, ribbons of farmland

guide our flight patterns east, west, north and south.


To get back home, we breathe into a paper bag.


 

God Particle: A Cosmology

                  Higgs boson: a sticky particle that gives weight and mass to all it touches…

                  …”smaller than all other particles but also heavier in atomic weight. Considered the glue of the universe,     the Higgs is an invisible energy field that fills space”. (mydictionary.com)


 I.  Dream


A taxonomy of animals parades

through the hardscape

guided by the stars,

or some invisible unction.


Suddenly I sprawl on a brick walkway

below, unbroken. A cardinal

hops towards me with great urgency,

then on my shoulder. I stand up

just as a river of black cats wends its way

through the town.


II. Anxiety/Waking


Heart’s mysterious pounding

in the dark—waking from a dream?

Rehearsing tomorrow’s failure?


Inside a macro womb

constellations of blood vessels

pulse their code,

elemental and Other.


III. Reality: Already/Not Yet


I remember I am held,

held first, then released,

released to crash into everything

sacred and profane:

to resound like a bell

to mourn like a flute.


The prayers of my ancestors

pelt like a meteor shower,

replenish like a Spring storm.

Let me be held in that prescience.

Let me not be forgotten.

Let my elements cycle

through eons and diffuse

to spirit, ash, ether.

When Day descends,

give me my new name

on a white stone.





Rachel Landrum Crumble recently retired from teaching high school, having previously taught kindergarten through college. She has published in The Porterhouse Review, Typishly, SheilaNaGig, and Common Ground Review, Spoon River Review, The Banyan Review, among others, and forthcoming in Poetry Breakfast and Humans of the World. Her first poetry collection, Sister Sorrow, was published by Finishing Line Press in January 2022. She lives with her husband of 43 years, a jazz drummer, and near 2 of their 3 adult children, and two adorable grand twins.  poetteachermom.com is her website. 

3 comments:

  1. Your poem "Lessons on Loss in January" has such a vivid connection to the culture of trees! Leave me my heartwood.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Your poems have taken me on an ethereal journey.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Beauty of the heart unfolded to the world. Very nice.

    ReplyDelete

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