Water
A rain-swept
parking lot edge.
Your face hidden
under a wide brim
Murray at the Ticket Office
I was a cute kid once
like this kid who's
running around my ticket office.
Would you believe it?
I was quite a kid like this one.
God bless my mother, she is spending my inheritance,
is in the nursing home.
She should be thankful
'cause I put her there,
eats out twice a week,
takes cabs everywhere.
You know, I was a kid once,
where did I go?
She is 88 and going strong, God bless her,
spending my inheritance.
Watch out, kid, you're going to fall.
Oops, hope he's okay.
My mother,
God bless her.
Wendel
We move in different zones.
Every night I play the drums,
read a Rumi poem
and Kora says she will come.
In my twilight moments,
just before I dream,
I hear her bumping into boxes, bags, tables.
As I stumble downstairs,
she passes me.
I do my morning salutation,
play the dumbek,
chant and read a Rumi poem.
We move in orbits around the boiling kettle,
leftover pizza and the sick dog's cage,
and after 20 years,
even the dead we bury are different.
She bumps into boxes, paper piles and tables.
We pass each other on the stairs.
The oak tree and maples are now giants
and the dog is sicker.
The front doorbell is broken
and the roof is leaking.
I park around the corner,
grow a goatee.
We pass each other on the stairs.
Flight
A distinguished old penguin,
grey whiskers,
wise eyes,
world traveler,
through stormy seas, icebergs
and channel crossings.
Puffs on a Cuban cigar,
skids on slippery peaks.
He tells Mrs. Penguin
he thinks of hanging up
his galoshes.
Taking up
tap-dancing.
Proving to his kids
he is hip.
Fills his lungs with Arctic air,
takes off his tuxedo,
surrenders to the wind
until frost fills every cell.
Forest Shiva
A Shiva prayer
for cousin Mark, who was hit by a truck.
The dead are multiplying,
the living receding.
Fallen trees
encroach on mourners,
withdraw their shade.
Trunks, split open, crowned by nests,
fall into the river.
Raccoons flee their hollows.
The river carries the trunks downstream
away from the mountain.
In the forest, terrified deer
trample rabbits,
hunters on their heels,
snap branches,
crush fallen bark.
Fog blankets the circle of mourners
and the forest.
e-brim brown straw hat.
Your pink blouse ruffles in the wind.
Mist rises from the blacktop
blurring your shoes and slacks.
Your straw hat dissolves into your pink blouse.
Low clouds
punctuated by streaks of light.
Trembling, murky puddles
emitting asphalt.
Your glasses sparkle.
Mount Monadnock floats behind you
flanked by evergreen specks.
A fragrant pink patch touches the brown and gray haze
between your outstretched palms
weighing the rain.
Cape May Point
where you find
your favorite blue blouse.
The kettle whistling
so you can pour your Raj tea.
You stumble,
dazed from a haunting dream.
Chocolate pretzels are on the fridge's bottom shelf
just as you left them months ago.
The house is ready.
Tin fisherman on the shed roof
sucks on his pipe.
A pair of blacktail seagulls
guard the tip of the mossy jetty.
The striped mat on the floor
by the glass table patiently waits
for the dog to come back.
Twenty years of daylight savings
in Cape May Point.
Lavender bush by the front door has tripled in size.
The front gate hinges need oiling.
Neighbors on both sides moved after the husband or wife died.
Your husband stands in a beige suit and blue tie,
bare feet, on the mantle.
His severe stare has not softened.
Masha
Grandma Masha is no longer furious at her neighbors.
Her face shiny, dressed up for the first time
since she came to Israel from Romania
in an off-white cotton shroud and blue kerchief.
Her denture-less mouth twisted in a smile.
Neighbors who shunned her as a crazy witch
put on hats.
She lies sideways in her son-in-law's narrow fruit wagon.
Children who used to break her windows
throw apples for a safe passage.
Uri, the street hoodlum, wipes his nose.
Her daughter Esther says,
Grandma Masha was not quite right in the head
since she came back from the camps.
Hid stinking food all over the house,
made the best mamaliga and borsht.
She was the best rug beater.
Her son-in-law Shmulik swats at flies above her head.
Frightened kids turn back at the gate of the cemetery.
Child
Every morning Snow White Smith
stretches lazily
shakes her golden hair.
Runs to the castle's top
to dry her dripping knife.
Deaf to her mother's admonitions:
Don't wear the black bra.
Don't overplay the virgin's part.
Innocence has its limits.
Her father laughs:
You'll never amount to anything.
All this business about
the prince and the apple
is a crock.
She puts on the red polka
dot dress.
Mounts a mule to
rescue her
child in the woods.