Wednesday, 16 October 2024

Two Poems by Mary Elmahdy

 




The Smell of Decadence


That feeling of decadence

named now in retrospect

was the stench of rotting

bucolic melancholy

as a war boom's velvet-lined decline

unspooled and a new decade climbed

until the crest of the wave folded.

We hardly noticed sliding

into cartoons on the couch

where tubes behind

the screen affixed us

to Betty Boop's boobs.


Before we knew it the neighbours

sprouted their own little loonies

with football-esque heads

strange combinations evolved

in cities and in burbs --

inside ticky-tacky little boxes Melvina

lived sticky little noses smelling lead

all the way to church

and some of us breathed it in deeper

feeling saved by visibly waving fumes.


Recording the be-bopping, rockabilly

car-radio love of the fifties

from seven days to age ten

I can recall the factories going derelict

along the river by Hertel and Military avenues

as time moved like index cards flashing past

us in seconds to leave only

dark-windowed emptiness

creeper vines draped on the sill’s bricks

abandoned to crack and seed

daddy's war bucks making more bucks overseas

marginally employing conquered orphans

burning with a yearning

to breathe anything

besides napalm and terror.


At the pinnacle of the great corn syrup phattening

the moment when momentum

sapped our vitality with its appetite

and sucked it all back in

before releasing the tidal wave

that left the teeth to feed a city frozen

grain belts & hoppers stoppered

going from boom to bust.

A gradual prospering cancer

eating away at it bit by bit by rust

as the new Chevys drove past

on their way to repo-yards

spitting rocks on the sweat of working slobs

picketed behind their white fences

and then, time moved on. . .

I've had to post my Amazons

at the archways

of every decade since

while I rush to get the details down

but the bandits still slip in

every time I sit to write

every time I rise to greet the light

every time I move to fill love’s distance

and get so close the lantern shivers;

whatever is most sacred

they've been taught to take –

and time marches. . .


The unblinking armies amass hordes

my trapped capture all but inescapable

I can’t tell if I’m dreaming or awake

May I not regress into cowardice

as I've done more than once

But can I become as devoted to lotus-eyed Truth as the gazelle

as graceful and fiercely willing

whatever comes

to trust:

There is purpose

where I see none!



Bath Time in Dyea, Alaska


Music heightened the mayhem when

guitars & drums & flutes & whistles

jumped out of the messy corners of the cabin

we claimed as squatters in our twenties


where we were fused together by our love’s child

then ripped apart against the tides

mixing rich river run-off with teeming hooligans

we fished from meandering rivulets


and the brave stripped naked like they were

home & perched bare derrieres along

benches we levelled into the glacial silt


deposited along the River Taiya’s banks

& we built a log sauna around us

peeling poplar bark with a spokeshave

feeling the juice beneath the skin

breathing it in as we worked


We cooked rocks like vertebrae dug

from the river’s side & ladled her cold water

on them for steam that forced


impurities to the skin until it glistened

with sweat streaming & screaming for more steam

until it hurt to breathe another heated breath


crazy we leapt up & ran to the river’s edge

grabbing overhanging branches as we plunged

trusting their stubborn roots to hold


immersing fully into the river’s quickness

ice milk & snow melt scrubbed us

with its grains hitting & exhilarating our skin

the danger of her current tingling over our scalps


we emerged cleansed from inside out & hauled

a bucket of Taiya’s sweet waters up to the house

to pour a long drink down our gullets

right from the river’s mouth


Now I jump into a hot shower

just like everybody else






Mary Elmahdy - When Mary was forced into an early retirement, with absolutely no plan, no savings, facing 4 years of surgeries that left her unable to work again, yet still living, although just barely on the dole alone. She thought what can I do with all this time but no expendable income? On a trip to Ireland, a young woman in a pub suggested to Mary that instead of writing short stories, “Why don’t you just write poems, they’re shorter!” So, that’s what Mary started doing about 10 years ago. She has been published about a dozen times, in a small quarterly in Sligo, Ireland under the nom de plume of Maria Sopapilla, in online zines and anthologies, but hasn't submitted any of her work for over 5 years whilst quietly working to hone her craft. Not because poems are shorter, but because writing is affordable and the journey into self-discovery has been intensely fulfilling. She feels like she has found her true calling. 

 

1 comment:

  1. These are both great poems, Maria Sopapilla. The rhythm with your words are amazing. And I liked how you established circumstances and the impending doom in both poems. Those unlikeable and scary memories from years long gone, remind me of so much that we went through in our early and later boomer years.

    But, the icy water ‘baths’ in a far northern river is one thing I never did. However, I’ve been tempted to do the January 1st New Year dive into frigid Lake Michigan (with swimsuit on) a time or two.

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