victim,

  prophesies winter.

  Button-drum

  seed pods fall

  from the hollyhocks,

  waiting for snow,

  waiting for spring.

  Rainy Night

  Near midnight, a tree frog

  croaks under my window.

  Science claims his croaking

  marks his territory.

  The frog and I know better.

  He sings because he wants to.

  The Moon Pretends

  The moon pretends

  it doesn’t mind

  bouncing over black

  cloud tatters

  the wind scattered

  across the sky.

  I know the moon

  is pretending, because

  its face is green.

  Poppies

  June poppies,

  orange and yellow,

  are blooming

  in Denver yards.

  They honor no dead.

  This is not Flanders.

  They bloom for joy

  that summer has come.

  The Old Ewe

  Rain on the shed

  sizzles like a kettle

  beginning to boil.

  The old ewe

  scrapes crippled hooves

  through the dung on the floor.

  She begs the mercy

  of a bullet in her ear.

  A mourning dove

  cries once in the rain.

  By the River

  I went down to the river to see

  the sunlight waltz across the ripples.

  The wind scattered the leaves of a tree

  hanging over the water. A man

  leaning against the trunk ate an apple.

  He gazed west as if to see Japan.

  I asked if he thought the fish could think.

  “Fish can’t think in rippling water,”

  he said, “it hypnotizes them.”

  He tossed the core. I watch it sink.

  “On moonless nights the fish think better.

  No ripple glitter distracts their minds.”

  He left. I watched the river turn pewter

  as clouds flew in on the evening winds.

  First Funeral

  We commonly visited our dead in May

  We brought them irises from our garden.

  We told them family news, then left

  to let them lie for another year.

  That March the sun was thin as water.

  Stale snow lurked in shady places.

  Carpet green as Christmas wrapping

  covered the brittle winter grass.

  Hothouse flowers covered her coffin

  balanced above the open grave.

  The preacher droned his graveside words.

  I squeezed my tears under my eyelids.

  We left her in the March graveyard

  waiting for May and an iris bouquet.

  El Amor Pasa

  Some rite should mark the death of love,

  some moment lovers declare love dead,

  with ceremony, then take their leave

  of one another with ritual graces.

  There should be words the parsons read

  with solemn sorrow on their faces

  in chapels filled with candle light.

  We’ll have to stumble as best we can

  through awkward meetings in public places.

  We have no comforting parting rite.

  Love died between us, I don’t know when.

  Your love for me was first to go,

  then, some time, mine for you was gone;

  No ritual marked the when and how.

  Flesh and Conceits

  Elizabethan poets wrote their rhymes

  to catalog their women’s charms

  in strained conceits, or else the times

  produced strange women, wigged with wire,

  with jeweled lips and ivoried arms,

  cold robots to set a man afire.

  I prefer your flesh to take to bed

  in all its humanity. Warm skin

  beats ivory; jeweled kisses wear

  the lips away. I like your head

  with hair, not wires. Crescendoing

  to spill my seed in your warm place

  I glory in your hips’ wild swing

  and the rush of blood that flushes your face.

  Teddy’s Bath

  Mother insisted Teddy was dirty

  and must endure the washing machine.

  I watched him through the glass in front.

  He battled the tumbling currents bravely,

  but his stitches broke and he lost his head.

  His cotton drained with the soapy water.

  His button eyes were left behind.

  They rattled round the tub as it spun.

  I wept over the rag he’d become.

  “At least he’s clean,” my mother said.

  “And dead,” I said. “I’ll fix him,” she promised,

  “while you take your bath.” “No!” I screamed.

  “I don’t want to lose my head

  and send my innards down the drain!”

  The Boy

  “Where has he gone, the boy who clapped

  his hands to the robin’s song and marveled

  to see the squirrels rear, rigid,

  to reconnoiter the park with fierce

  black eyes before they buried their nuts?

  That boy dreamed bright dreams and planned

  great deeds. I wonder, did he ever

  wander the woods with wolves his companions?

  Did he dance with dappled dolphins

  or run between the glittering stars?”

  “He boxed his dreams in workday tissues

  and put the boxes in his heart’s attic,

  took up the world of everyday

  and withered away among accountants.”

  The Singing Boy

  Angels might envy his boy’s soprano.

  His “White Coral Bells” enraptured

  an audience of parents and teachers,

  his “O, Holy Night” beguiled them

  to set their hearts on sacred things.

  At six he tore my homework in pieces.

  At seven he punched my stomach. At eight

  he tried to drown me in the toilet.

  At nine, he beat my head on the curb.

  I fought back, then. The teacher caught us,

  and punished me. She did not think

  a demon child could sing like an angel.

  At ten he moved, I hoped to Hell,

  where he could never sing on key.

  Ghosts Between Us

  Ghosts walk between us in the lane,

  hurts we’ve given one another.

  We talk of familiar things we’ve done

  hiding in ordinary matters,

  denying truth, hoping it withers.

  We wrap our hurts in shrouds of chatter.

  We fear to say them would open doors

  to mental rooms where clawed things wait

  to tear our crafted selves to tatters.

  How long will we fill our shared hours

  with idle conversation that floats

  like dandelions on the winds?

  Will brittle patter let us forget?

  Or free the ghosts that haunt our minds?

  If I Should Die

  If I should die before you wake

  some morning, take what time you need

  to know your grief before you look

  for other folk to comfort you.

  I would not go among the dead

  without remembrance or have you go

  among the living with untouched grief.

  Be with me one last while as we

  have been: one manifest in two.

  Then go about your separate life

  and let me be what the dead must be.

  If your separateness needs salve,

>   then think of me as one set free

  from the weary turbulence of self.

  In Fifty Years

  Fifty years from now will we

  sit in our rocking chairs all day

  waiting until we can rest and be

  forgotten names on tombstones cut

  with the chisel, or will we replay,

  although more slowly, what we thought

  and said and did when we were young?

  I hope not, for then our time

  will be short, and our ending ought

  to be a death-defying song.

  Let’s make a triumph, teasing rhyme

  and reason from chaos. We’ll tell all

  the gloomy wardens of that dark home

  the dead inhabit, we’re living well.

  Night Incident

  Eastward, rain obscures the dawn.

  Westward, the mountain hides the moon.

  Barking dogs and slamming doors

  have wakened us, to peer at the street

  through red-lit raindrops on our windows.

  We watch the crew roll out the gurney,

  we speculate in quiet voices

  what desperation rides its wheels,

  which neighbor copulates with death.

  Someone starts their car and follows

  the ambulance around the corner.

  Eastward, the dawn breaks through the rain.

  Westward the sun has touched the mountain.

  We wait for news in the morning paper.

  Night Music

  It’s three in the morning; I’m alone in my bed,

  wakened from dreams I refuse to remember.

  The sweat of my fear soaks my sheets.

  I turn the radio on for distraction.

  Steel guitars cry the blues, laments

  dry as grief, and hot as hate.

  They waken black things deep in me.

  Something struggles to live in the hollows

  between midnight and dawn, fights

  to birth itself inside me and crawl

  into the day to blacken it.

  I thrust the monstrous fetus back,

  change the station in mid-chord,

  and wait for day with piano jazz.

  Spring Breakfast

  In spring I breakfast with mourning doves.

  I remember their song from my childhood mornings.

  I wake un-rested from broken sleep.

  My knees remind me I’m growing old.

  Something grates in my elbows as well.

  My tea is bitter, my toast is tasteless.

  Sugar and butter sour my digestion.

  My eyes blear in the morning breeze

  that scatters iris petals on the deck.

  I force my fingers around my cup.

  The tea is hot and comforts them.

  I listen as doves grieve this morning.

  I chew my toast and sip at my tea.

  I’m glad my ears and teeth still work.

  Spring Vistas

  In April the world starts over again.

  Calla lilies bloom in the gardens,

  and rosebuds unfold in silver vases.

  Ladies in lace and watered silk

  drink jasmine tea from porcelain cups

  and pass platters of lady fingers

  with polite remarks about the weather.

  Weeds thrust up from sidewalk cracks

  and gnats dance over abandoned tires.

  Boys in jeans and baggy shirts

  drink yellow beer from shiny cans

  and pass corn chips in plastic bags

  with lewd remarks about their women.

  In April, the world renews itself.

  Summer Grass

  Summer grass was brown that day

  we marked the lambs and sheared the ewes.

  I put aside my