Poems · Published Poems

THE STREAM

THE STREAM
Snow laces branches and melts
in the stream that slips
between shaded hills.
Quietly, it slides
past trout lily and snakes
around remnants of shattered
stills. Winding its way
through running cedar,
it passes the ivory
remains of deer season. Snow
softens the landscape
but cannot cover
the bared ribs.

Blueline

Poems · Published Poems

SOFTLY

SOFTLY
Slip me
like silk
into one
demure
pouch so I’ll
can hear
the flight
of the migrating
ladybug, orca
sliding the drift
without echo
and I’ll
know
when you
leave.
The Bishop’s House Review

Poems · Published Poems

SNAPSHOTS

SNAPSHOTS
I

Small trailer, screened in porch, a door that sticks, brown couch, blue recliner,
coffee table. The husband, gray, thin, cyanotic lips, oxygen cannula around his
face. I have come to treat him. Strengthening exercises the doctor said.
The wife, warped by a muscle imbalance, useless arm akimbo. Despite their
problems, they manage, just like my parents I think. She showed me how to
increase the oxygen flow if he needs more. I know nothing of their life.

II

I pull into the drive by the ambulance. Gray body stretched on the floor, chair
out of place, she is screaming into the phone. “Come quick, Bill is dead” All
I knew was to hold her. Neighbors stop by, the police. “I didn’t do nothing,
I did the best I could,” she cries. Tried to get in touch with her son, but I was
shaking so hard I couldn’t dial. Someone goes to get him. The ambulance crew
gets information. Her parents finally come.

III

My father undergoing angioplasty, my mother sits alone in the wrong waiting
room, not even a volunteer to ask about family, any conversation to make
the time go faster. My parents told me not to come. A long day, the procedure
delayed. Finally someone finds her, everything has gone well. She asks for a
phone to call me. What were they thinking about me?

Iris

Poems · Published Poems

THE PALED MOON IS ERASED

THE PALED MOON IS ERASED
as sunflower yellows to morning.
A moth hides from day
under shaded bark. Wind
plucks a wisp of dandelion and nestles
it into grass. Summered heat distorts
distant poplars. Mimosa’s
dusk-scent settles on evening’s
folded leaves. The sun’s remnant,
a cloak of isolation,
covers me.

The Bishop’s House Review

Poems · Published Poems

MIST NET

MIST NET
The painted bunting cannot escape
the mesh. Wings and head tangled,
feet twisted in black net. It rests in the net,
begins to flutter at the bander’s approach.
Quietly, she encloses its wings in her hand.
Pulling the net from its feet, wings, head,
it flaps and pecks at her fingers, the angle
of the sun that drives it to flight fading for the day.
She places the rainbow bird in a white bag
Painted buntings have taken this route

since time has been measured. Only Archaeopteyx
can reveal if flight grew from a glide to another tree,
a hop to a branch. Its ancestors have seen the growth
and retreat of great ice, birds follow the same path
despite clear-cut forests and barrier islands

swept clean by Katrina. The bander
places a silver bracelet on its leg, measures
wing, tail, and bill. It rests for a moment
in the bander’s hand
this strange perch.

Poems · Published Poems

HEY OLD MAN

HEY OLD MAN
How come you work so hard to live? Home is a ragged trailer with TV for company. Maybe your brother comes over for awhile, or the grandkids leave their bikes in your yard. Every night, your daughter hooks you up to the fluid that mimics your kidneys. Each day you drag your weak leg to the naugahyde chair, fall in and drift between the sets of exercises I insist you do. I mark your name in the column that counts toward my quota.

You keep smokes close at hand, sit on the porch in a mildewed chair looking at the garden you can’t tend. Do you dream of planting pole beans when you doze in the morning sun? Wounds won’t heal, bacteria bloom like algae in your abdominal fluid. No nursing home will take you, dialysis costs too much, no money to be made. Your family signs for the surgery that takes one leg, then the other. Is hobbling to the shade to watch the kids play wiffle-ball in the gravel drive enough? Another surgery, this one to route blood to your rotting limb. I wish, “Give up.”

Poems · Published Poems

LOVERS

LOVERS
It starts as a bruise
at the ankle,
you don’t even know how it happened.
The wound festers,
a break in reddened
skin, a trickle
of pus. Superficial until

a scalpel through the sloughing
layers exposes
tendon and bone. New dressings hide
the wound
like snow covering a rose.
Tracks close
at night, only to re-open and drain
in the morning.

Cut and bandage, cut
and bandage
but the foot
cannot be saved.

Evergreen Chronicles

Poems · Published Poems

LAST LIGHT

LAST LIGHT
The ultrasound shows
the tumor that slips
between vessel walls
letting blood pass
into your gut.

I watch as the veterinarian pushes
sodium pentothal into your vein,
wait for the drug to leak
into your cells.
Breathing shallows,
eyes distance,
heart falters.
Was the last image
to reach your darkening brain
my blurred remains?

Poems · Published Poems

CLEAR CUTS

CLEAR CUTS
No forest over which the red shouldered hawk
can call and display, no oak in which to nest.
The black poll warbler has no stop-over
on its way north, no insects to fuel its flight.
Sun will not be shredded onto the forest floor.
The tuxedoed towhee will have no leaves
in which to scratch, its song will not spill
into morning air. Nor will wild turkey
have places to search for roots and insects,
no roost free from the fox’s hunt.
No shade will remain for the fern to uncoil
or for trillium’s subtle bloom. No leaf mold
in which the centipede can hide.
What’s left is scarred
and weeps sap.