Archive for the ‘poetry’ Category

I come from the land of winters

October 19, 2011

I come from the land of Winters,

Relatives, stone-faced, pose for the camera,

Mother, Father,

their children before them,

All standing proud,

not a trace of smile,

the Dutch sailed from Amsterdam to New York harbor,

from there to the great lakes and Chicago,

down to Indiana,

the Dakotas in the west,

This is the land of winters,

Where tulip bulbs snuggle deep into the earth,

While blizzard winds blow above them,

Piling drifts against doors of houses,

and children hope for schools to close,

Children learn to dress for cold,

their fingers, in gloves, still go numb,

Thick socks and boots cover little toes,

Scarves wrap noses and

tie behind the head,

and they go out to play,

Snow suits are part of a child’s wardrobe,

Underwear is long and insulated,

Papers delivered on below-zero mornings,

Hot chocolate awaits icy fingers at home,

A fireplace adds to the warmth of a room,

Leaves turn in September,

fall in October,

Ice covers pond through April or May,

Spring comes late in June,

Tulips rise from their graves,

Summer is HOT

But short-lived,

Where loss of power, means loss of life,

“Snow blindness” is a known disease,

People grit their teeth to face the cold,

And walk into the wind,

Gray clouds form a blanket

for weeks at a time,

like some long and lingering depression,

Survival here brings strength of spirit

Not understood in other lands,

in truth it takes a certain skill,

passed down for generations,

Being from the land of winters,

I have learned,

You can ignore the Cold that surrounds you,

And go about your day,

You can survive the harshness,

And just go out to play,

Lay down in the freezing snow,

Make a Snow Angel.         

     

 

 

 

 

 

C.Black 10-19-2011 

poem

August 18, 2011

Cuddle Up

Cuddle up on the couch,

Wrap yourself around the last week of vacation,

Bury your head in the sand,

Or possibly, the pillow.

 

These are the last days of solitude,

Of empty hours

Where you don’t have to be anywhere,

For anybody,

 

No student is asking what will be on the next test,

explaining their absence in your last class,

or asking if they missed

anything important,

 

You are only here, with Horatio,

Waiting for the next fake line,

For him to put on his sunglasses,

And solve the murder case,

Because that is what he does.

 

Your syllabi, still unfinished,

Lie upon your laptop,

Awaiting assignments

and “student learning outcomes”

No one cares to read,

 

Soak it up,

These final hours of summer,

Watch the sunrise upon the window,

Take a walk around the pond,

Go fishing for a poem.

 

CF Black               8-17-2011

poem for my father-in-law

August 10, 2011

Life Sneaks Up on You

Life sneaks up on you,

You’re not thinking about it,

You turn around,

And your kids are grown,

Your kids, in fact, have grandchildren,

And they are telling YOU

what to do,

You wouldn’t listen to them,

except you’re having trouble

getting out of your chair,

Your neck is in a 24-hour brace,

And they can’t figure out how to cure the infection

That sends you running to the bathroom,

Just yesterday, you took your wife

on a Caribbean cruise,

Drove out of state for family weddings,

Walked 2 miles when you felt like it,

Now, there are more pills to take

than you can remember,

Your body aches from constant pain,

You leave the house with a diaper on,

Your friends and siblings

Disappear,

One by one, they desert you,

You spend more time at the funeral home

than you do in your own living room,

Inside, you feel like the same young man

who years ago, returned from the war,

married the pretty young girl you loved,

and started your own home,

Hopes and dreams melt into

days gone by,

You turn around

And the years are gone,

You have no idea how this happened,

Yet, in everything, there is a season,

a time for every purpose under heaven,

the less time we have, the more we value it,

— the more precious the hours we are given.                     

                                                   CF Black, 7-30-2011

Secrets and Mysteries: poem for my great grandfather

July 1, 2011

Secrets and mysteries

To my great grandfather

In all families, there are secrets and mysteries,

Connecting generations through time and space,

Blanks in the puzzle

That don’t quite fit,

Amid names and places

closely knit,

I have been studying you,

I know when you were born,

Where you lived and

Where you worked,

When you had children and

how you died,

I could sit down in your kitchen

Share a cup of coffee,

Go over the collection,

Ask you, What fits here? And what goes there?

I can almost hear your voice as you

Call to your loved ones, as you

Worry about where the next meal will come from, as you

Learn of a parent’s death, or

Grieve over a child gone too soon,

It’s all there, on paper, on

Microfilm, transcribed, and then entered online, in

Microchips and megabytes,

Records of decades and centuries gone by,

The records of our lives,

But I want to ask you, WHY did you LIE

to the census taker who came by,

when she asked you, Where were your parents born?

Was it so hard to tell the truth?

Did you think it not the government’s business, and so you

Changed the story 3 different times, giving

Different answers from one decade to the next?

One time they were both born in England, but

The next time it was different –

 your father was born in Virginia, and your mother  came from Germany,

And I think, My God, if you didn’t want anyone to know

Who your mother was or,

WHERE she was born,

Couldn’t you decide to lie consistently,

to at least make it LOOK

As if we came from somewhere?

But instead you — lie, you

change the story, you make

pieces into the puzzle that just don’t fit,

and so I have to think that,

You really did have something to hide,

(And so you lied).

There’s that time when you were

8 years old and

Left there hanging, at the bottom of the census page, like

Someone’s forgotten anecdote.

Why WAS that, Did they almost forget you and

 call to the census taker, already half way down the street

On your neighbor’s porch, saying, Wait!

We forgot – there is another boy here!

Let’s add him to the bottom of the page . . .

as an afterthought,

And the wife of your father there,

She is too young to be your mother,

(Unless she had you at age 13),

I think it more likely there was a-

nother mother,

Was she Indian?

Was her skin too brown to claim, or

Was your step-mother just too

busy holding her new baby in her arms,

to remember you?   

I know you fought for the Union army, you

Came down the Ohio river,

 from Cincinnati to New Albany

and settled yourself in southern Indiana, started your own family,

and never again, that I can find,

visited your Ohio family,

I know your first wife died young,

But I can’t find where you buried her,

And with her you had 2 daughters

Who live into adulthood.

Then you married my great grandmother,

Who was 19 years your junior and you

 live out the rest of your lives in this place where the

Great Ohio river separates Indiana, from Kentucky,

North from south,

And with her you had 6 children,

The 2nd one dying in infancy, but the

5th and 6th were a set of twins,

One of them being my grandfather.

And I wish I could sit down with you,

Share a cup of coffee at your kitchen table,

Because you see, I’ve grown to know you,

And there’s so much we could talk about,

So many pieces of the puzzle never found,

So many blanks to fill,

But you’ve been

Dead in the ground now 105 years,

and your birth was 112 years

before mine,

But you see, that’s part of the problem,

because the men in my family

DIE SO YOUNG,

You, your son (my grandfather)

And my own father, gone before their time,

None of them living to 65,

All of them leaving their families behind,

to pick through the puzzles of their lives and to

Try to make sense of all the truths

And the lies,

 and I

Come to the conclusion that,

We sometimes have to go with what we know and,

Be happy with the pieces we were able to find,

And I hope that you will help me from

the place that you are now because

I know that your spirit is still alive,

and I know that family lines, with all our

secrets and mysteries,

Family lines and blood runs dark,

and deep,

and we all are a part of

those souls who’ve gone before us,

our stories intertwine,

our secrets long to be released.                                                                               

CF Black 30 June 2011

poem for oldest daughter

May 22, 2011

Distance

Distance does separate.

My heart aches to come visit,

Sit down, have a cup of coffee,

In your kitchen,

Talk as we go to the grocery store,

Which is when we truly share,

But there are 4 states

And 800 miles

Between us,

The sun rises here

36 minutes

Before it reaches you,

Your computer, depending on your paycheck,

May be on, or off,

And we do not do well on phones.

But there is no Winter where we are,

And Spring begins in February,

I have not scraped ice off the windshield of my car

Or felt my fingers go numb with cold

In three Decembers now,

There is something to be said for that.

And so we remain, alone, apart,

While grandsons grow up into men,

I am not there for “Grandma’s Day”

And we miss every game of their soccer season,

Life is always bittersweet,

Joy always comes mixed with tears,

We must gather the strength that lies within,

Trust in the Wisdom that brought us here,

Trust in the love that connects our hearts

In spite of anything.

the road much travelled

April 21, 2011

My husband and I soon leave for Indiana over Easter weekend. I hate the drive and especially hate driving all night. But we have no choice this time. A 3-day weekend with a 10-11 hr. drive isn’t that long of a time.

The Road Much Travelled

Soon, we leave,

after a full day’s work,

put suitcases in trunk,

laptops in car,

and hit the road much travelled.

I will grade papers

as you drive,

for when we return,

Finals begin,

the end to another semester.

We leave the warmth of the Carolina sun,

where Spring begins in February,

flowered trees now have diminished blooms,

and Summer is in the air,

We ride the road much travelled,

back to the north,

where corn will be sprouting,

but not yet high,

where the land is all wide open spaces,

and huge expanse of sky,

where the roundness of the earth

is seen and felt

in the sky’s arching down

to kiss the horizon,

where my heart still quivers

for 2 grandsons and a daughter,

and a son’s love beckons us,

come back to our roots,

on the road much travelled,

to the place we call home,

not the land of cotton, forest and swamp,

but the land of cornfields and soybean crops,

where cities have more than a million folks,

and people know Chicago,

where ancestors fought on the side of the north,

and no Confederate flags 

grace the statehouse lawn.

haiku

April 20, 2011

My husband told me the city of Col. wants to work with him to do poetry in the parks.

poets in the park
create sparks, watch them fly up
into the night sky

poem for a student

April 16, 2011

A young 2009 graduate who I only knew from working with him at a housing project with children, died in a hit & run accident this week. He was riding his bike on a Florida small highway, was hit by a car whose driver didn’t take the time to stop and assist, parts of his bicycle strewn all across the road. This is written in his memory.

Memories of Bryan Wrigley at Grant Homes

 

Every day, you came,

to serve the children,

got them settled

to begin their work,

 

You wouldn’t take 

no for an answer,

sat them down,

Put pencil to paper,

 

Quietly calling them all by name,

Firmly, but gently,

You made their learning a game,

 

Elijah, Devonte, Craig, Kalim,

Jordan, Diamond, Dynasty, Akim,

 

You quieted voices

of children in need,

of 10-year-old children

who couldn’t read,

 

You gave them a father figure,

and a friend,

Some they knew cared deeply

just for them,

 

Inasmuch as ye have done to the least of My brethren,

So ye have done it unto Me, *

Of all the ways you are remembered by others,

This one is special to me.

 

How we affect the hearts of children

may be how our life is measured, 

To none is known the time we have,

how many years we are given,

 

What more could any parent ask,

than our child burn so brightly

as to light another’s path,

 

For we know, beyond a doubt,

we will meet again,

in His “World without end,

Amen, amen.”

 

*Matthew 25:40

poetry music & friends

April 14, 2011

Last night my husband’s poetry night had nearly 30 people and 18 of them did some poetry and/or music. The diversity was STUNNING. We had everything from Country music singing about Jesus, to a poem about who goes to jail for 25 to life (by me, thank u very much), to excellent musicians that could bring down any house, to a couple who sing together and harmonize on the spot….. it was a stunning night, that’s all I can say. Many good friends and expression of who they are. This morning all I can do is give thanx.

women in the Middle East

March 27, 2011

Women in the Middle East

News reports abound

of freedom fighters,

Currently known as rebels,

they are those on the ground,

attempting to overthrow a dictator,

some sort of madman

who doesn’t care how many houses are pummeled

with his rockets,

how many bodies lie lifeless in his city’s streets,

He piles the bodies for all to see.

A widow mourns her husband,

Tells those who are listening

 to continue the fight,

She is 7 months pregnant,

Her dead husband killed by a sniper’s bullet,

In his 27th year.

The news is a sea of men’s faces,

the horror unfolds before our eyes,

Men in the streets wounded,

bleeding, chanting,

and I wonder, “Where are the women?”

They are somewhere hiding,

Behind the walls,

clutching their frightened children,

shielding their ears, wiping their tears,

because this is what women do.

This is what we have ALWAYS done,

the nurturing of the race,

And whether or not

It is in our biology,

or imbedded in our DNA,

It is simply the role we have always played,

A pregnant belly, our body changing,

Over the course of a year,

It  teaches us certain things,

Preservation of life is encoded, mapped onto,

And merged with, our sense of “self”,

Hundreds of Egyptian women

Poured into the protest on city streets,

Their men derided them,

Beat them down,

Told them to go home – where they belonged,

A Western reporter,

Separated from her colleagues

Is beaten and raped by the “freedom fighters,”

Another woman runs into a Libyan hotel,

Screaming she was held for the last 2 days,

Beaten and raped by government supporters,

We watch her on CNN news,

And as we are watching,

They return, and take her away

In a government car.

Later Libyan reports say she was insane,

And a former prostitute,

And I think, “I will never forget her face.”

World leaders discuss

How many torrents of rockets

Will bring peace in the Middle East,

And I think always,

The stories of women

Are hidden beneath the stories of men,

I can’t even imagine the stories of children

With their mothers, hiding, protecting them,

And I want these to be the headline stories,

The ones to come before the men’s,

But always,

Men are arguing, validating war,

Always, Women suffering,

Children even more.