Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Four Poems by Sarah Ferris

 






Lefferts Street, Brooklyn NY

 

Friends gather

like castoff theories of scholars  

to see how they might fit together

—and make sense—

at this party in Brooklyn.

Because alone they drift,

rotate edges

in search of companion angles

until their joining

is precious wisdom

pulled from fields of smoke. 


 

Eulogy for One Not Dead

 

She will dance into that good night,              

not burn and rave at close of day,

shuffle-dip, sway her way,

not rage against the dying of the light.   

     

She’ll don flash shoes and Lindy Hop

into that long sleep—she’s danced the

Bankhead Bounce out of a decayed marriage

and will dance into that good night.

 

She knows to heel-toe her way                                    

over bumpy bits, not burn and rave

at close of day, has schooled catatonic teens            

and will not rage against the dying light.

 

She knows the pirouette that centers.

Her dance is not to rage

but to live her days. She’ll lace up pointed shoes,

leap into that good night, arms wide

 

to the great unknown. She’ll release

once-sunshine tresses and

purposeful upon that supposed-sad height

she will fly into that good night.    


 

What Jack Did for Dan

 

When Holly died,

Dan refused to sleep in their old bed.

Jack found his brother on the sofa,

ants had invaded the kitchen,

swarmed dirty dishes,

paraded around crusted dish towel

paraded in lion lines up a wall.

Jack sprayed vinegar

and ants ran in frantic circles, drowned

in vinegar ponds and he wrapped carcasses

in paper towel coffins.

Jack picked clothes off chairs, floor,

table and loaded the washer,

stared at the steel drum

and remembered Holly’s

tilt of head, smile, wordless

affection saved just for Dan,

and how that look used to lift up

this heart now mourning.

Jack found his brother, his friend

in front of the TV, impaled by grief

on a sheet-wrecked sofa since he refused

to sleep in their bed. Any bed.

Jack brought two glasses of Johnny Walker Black

and sat next to his brother, the salve of love on anguish. 


 

The Dremel Tool

 

He touched my arm

and said his Dremel tool

 

could grind down

square turns on the plug.

 

I heard the whine

of the Dremel’s motor

 

through the garage wall

as a lover’s serenade.

 

Our rosemary bush caressed him

as he walked past

 

so the spicy scent was on him

as he supported the fountain.

 

I juggled plug, pump, and tubing

and inhaled the heady scent

 

between us. The fountain

played its water-music

 

as I stepped into his arms

and basked in the warmth

 

of his rosemary hands

where anything was possible.


Sarah Ferris has been making up stories and poems ger whole life, but without confidence. Her father said she was always 'off somewhere' as a child. A tree would become a tower in a castle, a rotten stump an entire world for small toy animals. 


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