JAGGED NIGHT
Inspired by painting #44 H Herschlag
A haloed moon outlines
jagged green mountains
against a royal blue sky,
and trees below as pointy
yet less menacing
than the neon-white teeth
of the huge mountain-dog
standing on moonlit boulders.
Her bulging yellow eyes two suns
in her squarish face
light the night sky
against predators.
Her arrow-like ears and tail
aimed at the moon,
her rectangular grinned mouth—
fanged warning,
protect the human fetus
inside her windowed womb.
Mother
where were you
at night?
I HAVE A PASSION FOR PURPLE
and its paler cousins.
In my garden tiny flowers I named Lavender Lights.
Mid-November, amid dark ferny leaves
they spark the air like baby stars.
Purple, a seductive color,
a grown-up version of pink and powder blue.
Magenta, violet-powerful, urgent hues.
What's purple? Lilies, lilacs, orchids.
Ah, the color of sex.
When aroused, saturated with blood,
a purplish-red penis, vulva.
So we women paint our mouths in varied shades,
lift our erogenous zone from crotch to face.
Peacocks fanning our feathers,
we stretch color beyond lip edge
for that engorged look. Matte velvet,
shiny satin, wet and ready.
Life is sex. Food and sex. Delicious plums;
eggplant, earthy purple. Some tropical fish
and birds blaze purple, as do sunsets,
and broken hearts. Bruises, strident mauve
and rose, jaundice as they age and fade,
but re-emerge, like a shrub's second flowering,
when echoes fill the air. My doctor slips
into dead father's robe: Less than human—he says
of my meek retreats. Pointing his rage-purpled finger, he
says—You wear layers of anger under ruffled blouses.
Anger drives you into a mole hole, leaves me
on this prairie, hunting alone. Blame, ballooned
big as Father's rising hand when he hit, hit
hit. Then my doctor shorts me of time, so I slip
my purple-yellow self off the leather chair,
past his word-splattered walls.
Though I am a squashed plum,
outer skin ripped, inner flesh
flattened, oozing, I am the yang of purple,
the underbelly of the rain cloud, scars, like belts,
hold in my pulp. Early on I learned the trick of starfish,
will grow whole again.
THE SPIRAL SUN
Inspired by painting #45
Spiral Sun/H Herschlag
Speckled as a grapefruit
on the rippled lake-mirror
inhabited by croaking frogs
My thoughts flap—
a sail in a halting breeze
waiting for a steady wind
to inform my eyes
Potent as a magnet
the steel-gray water
pulls my eyes to a dream image
shimmering on its surface
Blonde hair auburn-veined
piled high as an erect phallus
on Mother's head
Sunlit it smolders a warning
more menacing than
her hooded eyes
bared teeth
The heat in her—
the rage at the daughter
she does not want
IN THE DIRNDL MOTHER SEWED
I start twirling
out on the front lawn,
nine-years-old, skinny and twirling,
my gathered skirt balloons into a pumpkin.
Quickly I twist left, right,
left, right, the hem lifting higher,
higher up my thighs.
My first open air dance,
my pre-teen exhibition of femaleness.
Exhilaration squelches shame.
I’m learning to be a peacock, happy that girls
have more glorious colors, fan their feathers wider,
strut more than boys.
What are my arms doing?
Oh yes, outstretched, my ballast,
my gyroscope, keeps me from tipping,
helps propel my twirls.
On this sparkling summer day
I feel ladyish in my flower-flecked,
ivory, scoop neck dirndl
with lilac piping. Barefoot
on the grass carpet, I spin.
A HUMMINGBIRD
In silence
shy love-starved
craving a filial love
those first days
we nested for hours
on the tapestry
of my best friend’s couch
Ever so slowly hunger
for contact sated
lips hands groins
reached for more
Sailor-boyfriend’s kiss
upon my fourteen-year-old lips
traveled to my center
Purposeful as a hummingbird
Don ventured his wet tongue
into the bloom of my mouth
Gathering nectar
it flitted across my teeth
invited my tongue
to dance with his
My boy-man sealed his longing to mine
his arms the strongest of wings
tied us together
WIND AND SKY MY NEW SISTERS
I fly down the beginners’ slope,
a hundred pound bird
with skis and two six foot poles.
Sun-warmed face caressed by wind,
eyes feasting on white
and shadowed snow —
a family outcast,
I race into Nature’s arms.
Trees and sky my new family
healing as kisses
from my German shepherd
who whined and pawed Father,
pleading for him
to stop hitting me.
Nature, adds to my allies
her aerial bouquets
of sun-rimmed clouds,
her tree-studded land.
Speeding down,
down — gravity
fuels my power.
Entwined with the wind,
I traverse the hills,
intoxicated.
Skis lift me
from the corner
I crouched in at home.
The wind through bare trees,
and birds lure me
to sustained flight.
I am a new member
of a diverse
and large tribe,
always among family.
NO MATTER HOW MANY WARNINGS
She does not step gingerly
avoid deserted places
hold things up
to strong light
She is a dreamer of crinolines
ruffled curtains
moss between patio slates
bittersweet chocolate
on scalloped china
She won’t lock doors
while the sun still shines
does not pull shades at night
She plans parties for moon-gazing
Semi-sheer curtains in an unlit room
armor enough for her
She seeks the permeability
of outside inside
EXTRAVAGANT AS TORTURE
Extravagant, like torture/S. Plath/Ariel
Extravagant as cancer,
as a musician on coke,
as a fanatic on religion—
Zealots can be truly imaginative,
their inventiveness for torture boundless.
What if they’d harness this brilliance,
to good effect?
Instead of flying jets into buildings,
they’d devise ways to provide food,
and create jobs for their people.
Both destroyers and builders—
Hitler, Osama, and Stalin
Einstein, Kepler, and Newton,
had extravagant minds.
Did you see fifteen-year-old,
Jack Andraka, when he won
the $75,000 Grand Prize
for his cheap, early-detection
pancreatic cancer test?
Jack’s joy was ecstatic, exuberant—
his unconstrained mind
yields good for all humanity.
Regardless of geographical borders
Jack’s work will diminish the extravagance
of illness.
WINTER LURES ME
Clouds, static as chess pieces,
pretend to be mountains above
the rolling hills; snow-topped rocks
in the glistening black brook
look like amorphic marshmallows;
sun glistens electric wires
into strands of 24 carat gold.
Too lazy to trudge through deep snow,
we go for a photo search in the car.
Brown lamas finally are more vivid
in the albino landscape than the white lamas
on the green lawn always demanding notice.
The folk-art rooster next to the red shed,
now seen against the white canvas,
pops out more than when
surrounded by green, or ambering grass.
These miracles make me forget I am shivering,
standing knee-deep in snow
that seeps into my sneakers as winter lures me in.
I DREAM OF IRISES
purple as amethysts,
crowning long thin stems,
rimming a pond -oaked jade green
by reflected plants and trees.
Patches of sky-blue also shimmer
the wet jeweled surface.
Spring invites
my camera and me
to scan wood and hill
for more beauties
to adorn my sleep.
THE MOST IMPORTANT SEX ORGAN Dr. Reiner
IS THE BRAIN
Mind over matter?
I can’t walk on coals,
but can meditate away much pain.
And I agree with Dr. Reiner,
our brain can enhance
or deny body sensation.
Eyes open to minutia—
beauty abounds in the smallest surprises,
leaf-shadows on a stucco wall.
Especially on days of sadness,
watching a bee explore a flower
uplifts me like Mozart.
Walking in his garden, Pablo Casals said,
The beauty of a rose can make me cry.
Such concentrated focus is there for our taking.
Do your own tally, most calculations
come out on the plus side if one has
shelter, food, and lives in a non-war-zone.
I try, when my husband makes a crumbly mess,
to think of the X-rated grilled cheese sandwiches
he creates for me, better than the best panini.
It’s almost our 50th—the thought of a solitary life
for either can cause gut panic, but family and
friends also pollinate our hopes and dreams.
When body chemistry subverts my health,
I bribe my brain—there’s an RX
to counterbalance much suffering.
Some say Mellow out before sleep,
but our multi-talented brains sleuth through fog
to problem solve, intuit, and invent.
I hope to keep my mind dementia-free,
pleasured by trees, birds, dried blossoms,
clouds, people, and the morphing moon.
REBEL
She leaps out
from the austere cubicles of home
overflowing with dry ice
and finds a mate unwilling
to let go of childlike play.
His daring to venture into silly
leads them to frolic in clover.
She pinches sage between her fingers
to sate her awakened sense of smell,
and puts gold starflowers
behind her ears, in her pockets.
They hold hands, leans torsos apart,
and spin, falling to the grass
like three-year-olds.
A LULLABY AFTER CRIMSON FALL
Ambered grasses sprout tall
beside the mown green lawn—
a buffer between flatness,
jutting pine,
gold and orange maple,
and leafless trees
against a colorless sky.
Wide swaths of muted shades—
an interlude
before winter’s sleep.
SUMMER AND WINTER IT’S MY STAYCATION
Staycation—coined in response to gas pricesmaking travel prohibitive
My magical home
beside a small lake,
wooded on two sides—
each dusk bats feast
on mosquitoes,
leaving me bite-free.
On my back deck,
I’m serenaded by brook
splashing over rocks,
especially as clouds open their fists;
after, the happy hunt for worms
and the air is punctuated by birdsong.
Clear blue above,
hundred-year-old maple and oak shade me
early morning and late afternoon.
I’ve painted my garden with high-climbing clematis,
crimson and violet salvia,
blush of peony and mime-white Shastas.
Primroses, the finest of weeds,
not pesky like dandelion—
light up my flowerbeds.
When trees undress for winter
and blossoms are a dream long gone,
sculpted forms of willow
and jagged armature of sycamore
play against the sky.
Some days, the neighborhood draped
in bridal snow, I’m forced to wear boots
to inspect the myriad designs:
bouffant bushes, a hillock re-frozen
satin-sleek, with a wind-moiréd bridal train.
Except for minor infringements—
ant infestation at doorways,
mice infiltrating my garage,
squirrel migration into attic,
this is an ideal bed and breakfast,
lunch and dinner
