Poems · Published Poems

Elegy for my Youth

Elegy for My Youth

Gone the energy for weeding and planting in the yard all day

Gone the ability to carry 50 pounds of sunflower seed

Gone the taut skin on my arms

Walking without rest, reduced to carrying a stool

Gone is the easing into the saddle and settling onto the horse

Gone too is the horse

Shrunk with age, I can no longer reach the top cabinets

stretch to reach the clothesline

Gone the weekly letters in the mailbox

and the gnarled hand that wrote them

                                                            accepted Remington Review Fall 2018

Poems · Published Poems

What I Thought was Lost

What I thought was lost

         “composed of everything lost, in which everything lost is found”

                                                                                               Mary Oliver

Many times, I lose my way

going left when I should have gone right,

going down when up was the better direction,

keeping quiet when speaking was the best path.

I stumble over boulders trying to map

an easy route but find there is none.

On the way to a peaceful path, sometimes

on my hands and knees, I clamber

over rocks.  

I find in wandering,

many questions go unanswered.

Wasted paths turn up

at the strangest moments,

letting me find the lost.

                                                            Remington Review

                                                            Spring 2019

Poems · Published Poems

Snug Hollow

Snug Hollow

Rocky

outcroppings reach

towards azure sky’s dome

soon to be hidden by young leaves

of green.

Below

rocks’ gray faces

trillium unveils its

ruby flower, fiddle head ferns

unfurl.

Green hill

cathedral shelters

trillium, larkspur. A silent

prayer soars.

                                                                        Green silk Journal  2019

Poems · Published Poems

First Milk

First Milk

The calf falls into the world, it struggles to stand on spindly legs,

stumbles beneath its mother for that first milk.

I lurch out of bed to face the morning.  (day)

Stronger now, the baby sticks close to its grazing mother, trots to keep up

when she moves to another bit of grass.

I watch the sun shoulder the night away

Cud chewing time, the cow kneels to the ground,

the youngster beside her.

In the thicket, I hear the wood thrush pipe in the spring morning

Grass glistens in the warming sun,

the calf careens down the hill.

And I take 3 little pills to keep up with the day

                                                                        hellebore  2019

Poems · Published Poems

Casting Salt

Casting Salt

Like sleet, the salt comes out so fast

that it over runs the teaspoon

and scattered on the floor. 

Mother, superstitious as she was,

would remind me to take a pinch

and throw it over my left shoulder.

This to ward off evil spirits

and protect my soul.  I wonder

if the cake will fall.

But I leave the salt on the floor

knowing I might spill more

or snow the floor with flour.

I put the cake in the oven,

check back in an hour

for any effects of my sloppy work.

But no harm done, the cake rose

in the pan and is golden brown

on top just like the recipe said. 

I sweep up the mess I made.

                                                            Selcouth South  2019

Poems · Published Poems

Gathering Dust

Gathering Dust

Her name, I don’t recall but she was black, black.  She had kittens in my mother’s linen closet, I

only remember two, one was ebony, climbed into the car’s engine, the other we named Toby, gray and white.

My collection of cats: Pewter, wood, ceramic, whimsical, true to life, one-inch square painted in Paris, ruby red from a long-ago friend.  Salt and pepper shakers—white with black spots from a patient I treated.  Not exactly my style, but she insisted.

I have had two cats: Puff, he was feral, took two weeks to catch him in the apartment, had tapeworms bad.  Ivory came with a fake gemstone collar, took that off right away.  Puff, he used up one of his nine lives, swallowed an embroidery needle with thread.  I found it in the litter box.  Ivory had one ear amputated, a tumor.  Now I have two dogs, the greyhound trained to chase small fluffy things and a boxer/pitbull who has forgotten Ivory.

Maybe, if I wrap the figurines up, take them to the thrift shop, someone will buy the salt and pepper shaker.

                                                                                    selcouth south  2019

Poems · Published Poems

Hurricane Rain, Holden Beach

Hurricane Rain at Holden Beach

It slips from the clouds out on the horizon.

It marches towards the beach,

great drops pelt the waves with dimples.

It pocks the sand like blasts from a BB gun,

pastes each grain to its neighbor. It sands

the driftwood that washes ashore. 

It rinses dust from the sea oats,

salt from the car.  It pummels the window,

falls softly as the wind drops.

It trickles down my back through the leak

in my raincoat. It needles my skin as I lean

into the wind, wishing it would wash

you from my mind.

selcouth south  2019

Poems · Published Poems

Sunday Rain

Sunday Rain

Cascade to wash me clean,

stifle the day’s monotony.

Plummet from the sky,

erase death’s thoughts that stain my brain.

Tumble the energy of your drops

into words on this paper.

Thunder spill from my ears

so I can hear the bluebird’s song.

Flood me with blue sky, wispy clouds,

honeysuckle’s sweet scent.

Drown the gray clouds, drench my mind

with thoughts of the future.

                                                            selcouth south  2019

Poems · Published Poems

Thinkin of you,Holden Beach, Labor Day

Thinking of You on Holden Beach, Labor Day

Early morning sun dyes the sky

lipstick pink and pumpkin orange.

Evening’s sun will replace

these with shades of gray.

Waves thunder onto the shore,

shaking the ground as I walk.

The wind blows foam off the storm–

whipped waves that come in sets of ten.

Foam skitters across the sand,

melts into receding waves.

Above the tide line, the sand

is loose and hot, below, it is laced

with footprints of laughing gull and sanderling.

But this is how it is:

Afternoon sun bores into my brain.

Wind lashes dry sand that

roughs up my legs as I walk.

Remains of fishing lines, Styrofoam cups

assault my eyes. I walk anyway,

hoping the wind will blow you away.

                                                            Silkworm 2019

Poems · Published Poems

Last Year of His Life

The Last Year of His Life

My brother and I clean out Dad’s room

at the assisted living facility.

Six bags full of

 paper: shopping lists, letters

magazines: Physics, Science

receipts: utility bills, credit card

I use a few bags to cover framed photos

to take home. Mt. Denali, the pileated

woodpecker picture I gave him for Christmas.

In a black lawn bag, we stuff

the suit he wore to Mom’s memorial,

sweat pants, his khakis, shirts, items

we thought Goodwill could use.        

                                                The Maynard

                                                            4/2014