Monday, October 28, 2019

It's been awhile

Posting again after a long break. Sorry for my laziness.

P.E.I.


a grain of sand (flecks off the Teapot)
upon Thunder Cove beach, many red-rock Inushuks
saluting the Gulf of St Lawrence, fields of iron-rich soil
full of potatoes for shipment off island
Canada’s smallest province welcomes 
more than one million tourists (mostly to 
eat lobster and visit Anne of Green Gables’ farmhouse)


© October 2019



When We Meet


unlike winter stars crisp clear cold connecting you and me
we are not joined though occupying the same space and time
no matter who we are and where we end up. I cannot hear
your thoughts, am blind to your actions as we lose
precious time arguing for no good reason. what have you
gained? Only sorrow.


© October 2019




Abashed Collecting


One ticket from a cruise along the Seine
Two decorated wooden shoes, filled with soil, used for tulips
Three coasters showing scenes of London in 1872
Four used tickets for the ferry from Jersey to Guernsey and back
Five postcards of Constable’s landscapes from the National Gallery
Six matchbooks from Munich restaurants (never used)
Seven menu cards for dinner aboard a river cruise up the Rhine
Eight decorative European teaspoons inherited from my mother
Nine pebbles taken (don’t tell anyone) from the shores of the Gulf of St. Lawrence
Ten graphic T-shirts so worn out I can’t tell where they’re from anymore


© October 2019

Monday, July 29, 2019

Sorry I've Been Busy

N. A. Chaos


The intersection of Yonge and Bloor at 5pm on a Thursday
in July, 2 hours before the Blue Jays play New York Yankees.
Pedestrians scramble north-east to south-west on red lights
every which way. All cars are stopped. A bead of sweat,
two honking horns, three skyline billboards,
four sidewalk preachers, five Starbucks franchises,
six, seven, eight, nine, … 2.8 million mouths to feed



© July 2019

Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Another Month, Another Location

Prairie Winsome 


Drive across Saskatchewan where the horizon
never changes, never rises, never falls. Fields of canola
as far as the eyes can see, uninterrupted by time,
parched for rain. A collection of tombstones cast
shadows, remind me of ancestors who travelled far
from the potato fields of Ireland. Soil baked, cracked dry
by the constant sun. One maple sits alone, its neighbour
down the dusty road 50 kilometers away.


© July 2019

Monday, June 17, 2019

The line aren't that blurred

Hidden Lines


How is it that I see you standing in line at the checkout
but you don’t see me? Am I covered by the invisible cloak called racism
or an underused one called sexism? Are you blind to those
who don’t look like you? Then you’re in a line by yourself.

Open your eyes and see what’s standing beside you, in line
for a coffee, a passport, a car loan. We breathe as you do. And yes
we bleed. We welcome our neighbours to join us for prayers or
watch the league championship on a big screen TV.

Are you afraid of what we appear to be, not from your home town,
coloured from a new box of crayons, created by merging the lines
of humanity that started when we left the trees to cross the vast landscape
in front of us? Or are you just unhappy to be ‘woke’ on this fine day?


© June 2019

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Happy Father's Day Dad

The Perfectionist


My father helped me write a poem once; well
maybe I should say that he wrote the poem and
I transcribed it on a piece of foolscap paper.

The assignment was to write about some bears,
every other line had to rhyme; each stanza had to have
four lines; there had to be four stanzas. I was in Grade 4.

My father was a perfectionist, so the poem
had to be just so, just like every poem he had read
when he was young in a British public school.

I don’t remember what the teacher said about my work,
or the mark I got. My only clear memory of it all was
that father didn’t want to let me fail, at anything.

I wonder what he’d think of what I’ve written now.
He’d probably try to fix it.


© June 2019

Saturday, June 15, 2019

Still writing, still growing, still open

Mentorship


She said write about what you know
I said I know nothing, that’s why I’m taking this course
That’s why I’m putting myself out there
That’s why I’m attending this mic-nite
That’s why my knees are knocking, and my palms are sweating

She said to start simple and just write, don’t edit
I said but my spelling’s atrocious and rhyming just isn’t my thing
Structure just isn’t my thing
Interaction just isn’t my thing
Spilling my guts and revealing my slip-ups just isn’t my thing

She is a birch, a hazel”, she quoted this poet I’d never heard of
and waited for me to reply. I shook my head, said “no idea”, to which
she whispered, faint and remote, “a straight slender young rowan
as she turned, walking away. I stood there in awe, I stood there expecting
a rush of excitement, I stood there at a loss for how to continue

to think I could write poetry. When I tried to leave, completely dejected,
the woman in the ratty pullover and tattered jeans at the back of the room
stopped me. “Don’t go. Don’t give her the idea that she’s broken you.
Don’t give up so fast”. I shook my head with a “Maybe she’s right. Maybe
I’m out of my league”. To which she replied, “She was once just like you.

Unsure and afraid of making mistakes. She persevered. She strived. She worked
her butt off. She made the words blossom, the lines flow, the poems express
the pictures she saw in her head. I should know for I am her mother, and she has
made me so proud. Sit here, next to me. She’ll stop by after she’s ripped
into the rest of them. She’ll talk and you’ll listen and learn. You’ll grow”.


© June 2019

Saturday, June 8, 2019

Limericks

Hadn't realized I haven't posted lately. Here's a few.

Hippie Dippy


I tie-dyed a T shirt today
Rinsed out with cold water, okay
Made it blue and green
No white to be seen
The seventies look’s here to stay


© June 2019



D-Day 1944


Over the ocean and years ago,
a battle was fought, rescue was slow.
Many friends (they were lost)
did not know the cost
of the sacrifice made to stop foe.


© June 2019



Kicked Out


The sun is awash with mystery
The moon shows fully its history
Pluto no more
Stays with the core
The residual planets aren’t sisterly


© June 2019





For shame. I've forgotten to post.

Just realized I haven't posted since last May. I'll try to be better in future. Dust to Dust Someone let a fly inside the house inst...