Saturday, 25 October 2025

Five Poems by Myrna Stone

 







 

A Thin Place of Another Sort

 

No order or law we know explains the consort
of lure and lore, or why a bridge which soars

 

four dozen feet above a gorge in Dumbarton,
Scotland, compels dogs both small and large

 

to jump its parapets to their breakage or death.
What causes it, one local asserts, is the heady

 

scent of animals below which drives dogs quite
mad. . . . Mad or not, three hundred have leapt

 

into the hushed plush crevasse through which 
the Overtoun burn wends its green stitchery,

 

having drawn dozens of them, already unsound 
and spellbound, into its watery depths to drown. 

 

Others, airborne from parapets closer to entry
points onto the bridge, find a more temporary

 

rest in the gossamery ferns along the burn’s 
mossy berm. Our resident spirit here spurs

 

them on, happy to steward their mortal race,
another local insists. That specter, Mrs. Grace 

 

White, her name the only import given her
at birth and marriage, is most often referred

 

to now as the White Lady of Overtoun House
who, for three decades, refused to renounce 

 

widow’s weeds as she mourned her beloved.
She appears irregularly, ghosting her leaded

 

casements overlooking the gorge, and, less
often, drifting in her fallow garden’s gorse,

 

though she and the dogs, in the way of all such
thin places, remain aloof and predictably mute. 

 

*This poem originally appeared in the journal Mezzo Cammin
Vol.15, Issue 1, under the title “A Thin Place.”




The Abandoned Greenhouse

 

     Certain herbs are thought
          to lessen impaired cognition...
                  —American Herbalist Guild
 
Little cathedral of iron and glass,
of arch, mullion, and broken apse,

 

the faint twilit specters of rarified
flora you once coddled electrifies

 

us but briefly, for year upon year
you litter anew in dross. What fear

 

have we then in being drawn here
to the site of your ruin but the clear

 

sense of our own, which day by day
plays out beyond this wasted acre.

 

Thus we come for the sovereignty
of nature loosed, its sprung bounty

 

occupying each inch of your ambit
our pharmacopeia: yellow circlets

 

of bristling autumn hawkbit lodged
among the stalks of fringed sedges,

 

mild lemon balm growing wild
in the higher compromised aisles,

 

and, on the verges, flanks of downy
roseroot abounding—yes, beauty 

 

about—and each herb a tacit conduit 
to the wherewithal to remember it.

 

*This poem first appeared in Mad River Review, Vol. 5, Issue 1


 

 

Last Easter, in the Village Graveyard,                                                                     
    My Husband Manifested as Spring

 

Amber and diaphanous as a cloud
at sunset, his spirit hovered above his stone,
assessing my every step in this temporal world.

 

How do you know it’s me, he asked,
when all of us look alike in our astral state,
a recompense given us, an oddly ironic tactic, 
 
neither completely female nor male,
but redolent of each. Yet, because I inhabit 
my earthly self and breathe, I was loathe to praise 

 

him or lecture him on the vernal
scope of the afterlife. Instead I extolled horses 
that carry us through it, manes woven with seasonal

 

lilies and strands of silver, their teeth
creamy as alabaster. Do you see their progeny
in the pasture? I asked. Why not offer them sweet
 
carrots, or oats, or corn, and profess
your love for them? But he, as was his wont,
morphed into the darkening dusk as he ascended

 

in a vapor. Still, I expect this spectacle
again, challenging, or arresting me otherwise, 
for there exists here ample portals of departure.



 

In the House of Spirits

 

I live in a haunted house, built originally in Rhode Island in 1761 by Daniel Thornton.
Thornton’s spirit traveled with the house to Ohio and abides here now, as does my husband.
 
My husband, joining ranks with Daniel Thornton,
loiters with him in the library, examining scores
of London books. Afterwards they will drift among

 

the upstairs chambers, two specters of glimmering
light devising in death what they rarely imagined
in life, surveying each of our soon to be slumbering

 

or sleepless guests. Yet the impositions they bring
to us awake or asleep we have grown accustomed
to as they cast our windows open to the icy fissures

 

of winter storms or the smoky influx of fouled air,
or disrupt our new water furnace and its heated
or cooled flow. Meddle they may but have a flair

 

for mindless intercessions. Still, if we broadcast
our plight to the cosmos, we shall be humbled,
struck ineloquent, and denied any sort of respite.

 

My husband, however, once again having masked
his face with his cap at the usual inopportune
moment, materializes in and out the door, a prank

 

he performs each night, though we no longer react
with laughter. For we are notably less malleable
and surmise he will find his rightful place of rest

 

in good time. Or he may dither, that stubborn man.
But for now he and Thornton espouse the moon,
huge and orange, as they ply their evening amble.


 

 

Did I Ever Really Know You

 

Did I ever really know you, figment
of my heart, or merely conjure you whole,

 

faithless to all but your fleshly existence?
Did I ever really know you, figment

 

of my heart, your finely-honed brilliance 
abetting your brash and riven soul.  

 

Did I ever really know you, figment
of my heart, or merely conjure you whole?









Myrna Stone is the author of six full-length books of poetry: The Resurrectionist’s Diary (Dos Madres Press, 2021); Luz Bones (Etruscan Press, 2017); In the Present Tense: Portraits of My Father (White Violet Press, 2013), a finalist for the 2014 Ohioana Book Award in Poetry; The Casanova Chronicles (Etruscan Press, 2010), a finalist for the 2011 Ohioana Book Award in Poetry; How Else to Love the World (Browser Book Publishing, 2007); and The Art of Loss (Michigan State University Press, 2001), for which she was named 2001 Ohio Poet of the Year. 

 

She has received three Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Awards in Poetry, a Full Fellowship to Vermont Studio Center, the 2017 New Letters Poetry Prize, and the 2002 Poetry Award from Weber, The Contemporary West. Her poems have been nominated for Pushcart Prizes and have appeared in such journals as Poetry, Ploughshares, Boston Review, TriQuarterly, The Massachusetts Review, NimrodRiver Styx and Southwest Review, among many others. Myrna's poems have also appeared in sixteen anthologies including Flora Poetica: The Chatty Book of Botanical Verse.


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Five Poems by Myrna Stone

    A Thin Place of Another Sort   No order or law we know explains the consort of lure and lore, or why a bridge which soars   four dozen f...