2004
To Donna
Where shadows fold one by one across a seamless sky,
I wait in the doorway for a new year
frozen by the wheels of the factory clock.
Wind whitens my ears into porcelain seashells
with words that are no longer necessary;
a promise drifts up in yesterday’s ashes
from the bottom of a 50 gallon drum;
I flip a coin in a climate that remains
fixed, foreign, and under glass.
Punctually, I desert any miracles by midday
for those less fortunate, and empty my pockets
slowly into the hands of a snowman.
Published : Blue Collar Review 2004
no comments | posted in Awakening at 60 / 2000s
2003
I pack each reflection
balancing the horizon
as the invisible cold
warms slowly my face
from an endless field of poppies
I hide in the darkness
of your shadow
My arms reaching
into the distance of your sleep
Fingers walk along
the white rapids of sheets
surrounding the lazy freedom
of your body
I bend like paper
to ink this moment we are breathing
And in this moment
I find possibilities in the landscape
as we get older
like a farmer luminous at dawn’s light
knowing the waters in the furrows of his field
will last a lifetime
Published : Sahara, A Journal of New England Poetry / Winter 2003
no comments | posted in Awakening at 60 / 2000s, Poetry
2003
The broken stairs rise
for the moon to step
as you turned
and walked away
And there is little
to remember
among the omens
looking for your shape
among the broken hands
of statues holding
schedules of trains
in their timeless palms
I look for your likeness
in the frozen current
underwater where winter
swims up to catch its breath
My name disappears
whispering through cracks
in the wall
I never understood this hunger
diminishing life from its roots
like pages torn from a book
like the heart of a star
growing smaller
as I grow near
I have often dreamt
myself awake and bothersome
like dust in your eye
listening for the stale note
that calls my name
each morning from a doorway
that isn’t there
Published : Sahara, A Journal of New England Poetry / Winter 2003
no comments | posted in Awakening at 60 / 2000s, Poetry
2003
I know places
where cities of the heart
create themselves into the hours
and addictions of a day.
I know outside each door
a precipice waits
holdings its breath,
humbling feet and hands
to the fragrance
of what is unspoken.
Winter sinks into an unmade bed
unfastening her dark highway of hair
The last apples shiver like stars
in a sea of skeletal trees.
“Come,†said the Reaper,
“My hands are cold
and the world is still.â€
Published : Ship of Fools / Spring 2003
no comments | posted in Awakening at 60 / 2000s, Poetry
2002
Is he really
looking for diamonds
or just the next town
That was yesterday
I watch
how the earth
closes like a hand
around him
and leaves no trace
He shapes life
into the soles
of his shoes
whispering
to the road
like a pair of dice
Published : Ararat Magazine / Autumn 2002
no comments | posted in Poetry, Awakening at 60 / 2000s
2001
Your delicate wingmarks
tell how days are made,
until the last one vanishes
into shadowy weather.
Your hair embroiders
the wind with kind words
and yesterday’s promises
hang by a thread
under the dark fist of a spider.
I touch the branches of a tree
like the keys of a piano,
arousing the leaves
into a green dance
in the palm of your hand.
As my words unlock
the letters of your name,
we eclipse
between folded hands
unable to hold
the dream we
keep reaching for.
Published : The Midwest Quarterly / Winter 2001
no comments | posted in Poetry, Awakening at 60 / 2000s
2001
My hands grumble with bread,
and I wonder if all children
disappearing between
the yellow lines of morning
go to the same place.
When it’s dark, feet bare as my own,
move towards a heaven
where water slips through my fingers
and love empties out of me
into wrinkled dunes of desert.
My tongue is dust. I answer
questions with it, so all can see
what it is made of.
Something invisible falls to the floor
to remind me of a way back. My legacy
weathers into fingerprints of sand,
and eyes burn a hole in the dark
that leads to the next dawn.
I hasten from a life of quick endings
learning to cultivate
what others leave behind.
My hands hold wind nightly,
like a prayer, expecting
no miracle or god to appear,
only the breath
I will be allowed to keep.
Published : The Sow’s Ear Poetry Review Summer/2001
no comments | posted in Poetry, Awakening at 60 / 2000s
2001
The day grows white with black looks.
A phantom wind bandages
the mouths of broken windows
with newspapers and leaves.
I dispatch messages, but only grass listens
before claiming a part of me.
Between breakfast headlines
and a bowl of grand illusions
I forgot how much I loved you
as you walked among the purple laughter
of thistles in a landscape where nothing
lasts forever. Here our words are unclouded;
they go on dancing after we have gone,
distilling dreams from the ashes of disbelievers.
Here among fallen school yards,
voices of children find our names
one by one
becoming their own.
Published : Published: Midwest Poetry Review / Jan. 2001
no comments | posted in Awakening at 60 / 2000s, Poetry
2000
From the orchard silhouettes
of night run from the dawn
The bat covers itself with wings
upside down
a dark fruit never picked
Voices from the field shift
from north to south
In the east a silver incandescence
in the dark begins to filter blue
Mountains appear
like ancient castles
in a vapor of blackness
Dreams ghost into high clouds
and preparations for morning
untied shoes and eyes shut with dream
Voices out of empty socks
hatch into visibility
Outside
lights fade into a blue wall
and the smell of coffee
on each breath
replaces a question
scratched into the path
of each calloused palm
I turn
to the silent growing
of seeds
no one hears
Published : Ship Of Fools / Winter 2000; Gypsy Magazine / Vol.17
no comments | posted in Awakening at 60 / 2000s, Poetry
2000
Under the rind of moon
a foghorn raises
the sun
to stuff me into my socks
twelve hours a day
leaving no proof
in the yard
Across the street a suit goes to work
In his pocket his final possession
gulps its breath
a morsel of faith
rises like steam
clutching a kingdom of keys
…at the curb a get a way car idles
no comments | posted in Awakening at 60 / 2000s
2000
I surrender to the passion
Between two branches
Listening to a flame
Choke in a lake of wax.
The sun sets on
What I have left of life.
A child glitters
From midnight windows
Behind my smile
The hard edge of hunger
Goes from my plate
To his and we pick the street clean.
I am an accomplice
To gulls, beating their wings,
Refusing to go south.
I watch the path in front of me
Vanish among the dry words
Of escaping leaves.
no comments | posted in Awakening at 60 / 2000s, Poetry
1999
I think of you
 bent over unlaced shoes
looking for your name
over a desert of daydreams.
Daily you devour
the distance you become.
“Dead, dead, dead, I’m dead,â€
you said, humbled by glasswired windows
and a a world where earth and sky
have suddenly disappeared into thin air.
I watched you like a blindman search
for the fingerprints of a door
and come up empty. For a moment,
your eyes remembered the wholeness
of things before foghorns
evaporated a lifetime in a wink
of sound. Then you shriveled
into darkness, the moon’s
mute eye
like a shadow at dawn.
Published : The Midwest Quarterly / Autumn 1999
no comments | posted in Poetry, Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1999
Loneliness is a conversation
hidden in his pocket
with letters of the Armenian alphabet.
Zaven distills September’s fruit
into decaying bouquets. His large hands
tremble with ingredients, a lost recipe
turning water into wine.
Where the laughter
of naked feet and dust create an ancient
village in the orange waters of an afternoon sun,
Zaven sings like a mother who buries her children young.
“Soon tomorrow will be yesterday,
and I will still remember,†he recites
to sleeping birds.
His words dance like feathers
in a prehistoric wind.
Published : Midwest Poetry Review Spring/1999 ; Ararat Magazine Winter/2001
no comments | posted in Poetry, Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1998
Where stone fences merge
into a wilderness of suburbia,
grandfather leans on the shadow
of a plunged spade, embracing
unchartered passages of wind.
Balancing thinly, he weaves
like needle and thread
through heads of cabbage,
heart-shaped tomatoes,
and green flags of young celery;
he is an ancient tongue
among deaf ears; he steps forward
before the day gathers
into a mortal echo
of uneaten fruit,
sowing himself among
the dark hands of water.
Published : The Small Pond Magazine of Literature / Fall 1998
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1998
Walk away from glacial echoes
of tin cups
and star-shaped staircases
where second
crowd behind you
like pinpoints and periods
Inside my skull
a wind gallops overhead
pushing for an opening
like moths
beneath a rafter of obsidian
Through empty streets a new language
discovers with haste
identities forged in blue ink
Across vacant fields
winter covers itself
in white lace
Shadows approach
I emerge slowly
an alphabet of silence
clinging to the breaths of icicles
Published : Rain City Review /Summer/Fall 1998
no comments | posted in Poetry, Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1998
in
the cold gray
storm/clouds
whale like
smile some fever
of blue sky
two coins wheel
from a torn pocket
down the road
the sound a child hears
there is a north wind
that freezes the eye
into pinpoints
a fever knots the body
like a balloon
and crosstown
the factory whistle
blows early
silhouettes stitch the darkness
with quick needles of light
in a parade so routine
life wonders
if night can weave a cocoon
to warm the blood
until morning
now street lamps and neon
kick on, blinking momentarily,
with steady juice
buzzing magically
through a thousand wires
. . .I bury my fists into my jacket
frozen they sleep like stones
my breath steams the windows
where the broken hands of fathers
open empty tables, and the quiet whispers
of mothers nourish the dreams
of children with winter fires
and Spring
sometimes I am a desert
and wait for rain,
or lost travelers
stopping for sleep
Published : Louisiana Literature / Spring 1998
no comments | posted in Poetry, Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1998
I lived underground during the 1950’s
in the wake of my father’s habitual
and unknown rage to weave himself
through the stagnant air creating an alphabet
of icicles from the eave of his wooden tongue–
He struggled in a web of private conversations
and kept us silent with threats and abandonment–
orphaned to invisibility where dreams survived
on the urgency of boredom
‘
…..And being 10 years old I would slip
like a lizard into a pool of shadows
finding a pathway from his dark window
down the yellowy fragrance of a lemon tree
studded with thorns
and into my grandmother’s backyard garden
where imaginary winds dusted with sunlight
lingered beneath a veil of star-faced jasmine–
I listened to the growing of things
whose boundaries opened into wilderness
where the city stopped and farmland
spilled like ink over the landscape for miles
Screen doors swung easy like clockwork
in a trusting wind which seemed strange
on a planet where nightly
blue-collared fathers knee-deep in backyards
dug bomb-shelters after work and on weekends
with nightmare delusions of reddened skies
swallowed by mushroomed clouds
Families struggled sinking
silently into a lifetime of expectations
Their other selves left to keep appearances
a mirage of green lawns and a perfect death
No one really slept!
Buried up to their necks in schedules and telephones
watching children disappear into a blank margin
of no return …….across an outfield of timeless summers
forged with long hours and hunched backs
looking for work and the American grail
even on Sundays before dinners in copper-tinted rooms
tanned by the oily seasoning of garlic and lamb
where windows hung like portraits of hunger from far away lands
at 13 I heard schoolmates point in slow motion
at the Armenian in me and the invisibility that was visible
in a Kingdom where dreams survive on long tables of diplomacy
and reality speaks from the splintered lips of baseball bats
threatening the heroes of this poem
to bleach their dark skins white
…They called Armenians “Fresno Indiansâ€
with our hollowed eyes and and eagle-beaked noses
but my grandmother said
“They called us starving black Armenians….firstâ€
Those whose promises
promised nothing
in a land that genocided its natives
with no reservation
We were no strangers to genocide
fugitives of dust
we blurred into borders and brown-faced hills
to wait like grass for winter’s first rain
We survived the delirium of previous lives
as if some god had forgotten us
and ordered our children to bleed
our earth to be bitten and bled
We embraced life without a tear
our skins emerging from an undergrowth of syllables
unfolding from the simple grace all miracles grow
……..The ranches I knew as a boy have turned to salt
and winter like my grandmother’s unbunned white hair
haunts the ruins of broken mirrors
in empty stations looking for the river back to eden
praying for a melody on the green side of childhood . . . .
She assumes what is necessary for the moment
to shape what remains after death
having liveda life on the edge
now sits at an empty table
Her hands drink a headful of bad dreams
and everything that she was before
commands the wind
to sing in Armenian!
Published : Americas Review / Winter 1998; Ararat Magazine / Fall 1997
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1998
To Larry Levis
Street after street
I keep your death
between my teeth
its iced wing thaws into a sound
that turns a shoulder West
and chooses not to stop
The road calls
like a woman lifting
her arms to welcome the future
with an unbreakable embrace
Under candlelight you touch
her skin with swollen palms
stained black from picking grapes
in the San Joaquin
where halos of dust
hover from light to dark
until there are no shadows
from the heat’s trance
Here under green waves of grape leaves
we snapped rubied clusters
between thumb and knife
rescuing moments that were
fermenting with age
until words were no longer necessary
I catch your shadow ringed by stones
stepping from the vineyard
of your father’s farm
Thin shoulders shrug and pinch a smile
where the worn spots of earth
slowly fill in the roots of your breath
Overhead flutters of white doves
burst from a nearby barn
where I see you leaning from sunlight
your dark eyes child-like
and lamenting
no comments | posted in Poetry, Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1997
Wildflowers, star thistles,
and late afternoon soften
under a child’s eye. Observer
she mimics sounds
of lifting birds, where rivers
vapor among the dark
and hunched backs of mountains.
Winter thaws in the mouths
of butterflies and bees
caught in frantic trance
they dance,
piercing
the faces of blossoms.
When stars turn to clear water
the child lets the water
carry her reflection past deep pools,
rock islands, trees arched
over a white passage thin enough
for a shadow to cross.
In her hair grow landscapes
of orphaned birds
too late to catch the wind.
She plants each
at dawn in the field
behind my eyes,
where horses
raise long necks
calling in darkness;
And the bending of the grass
Stills long enough for a portrait.
Published : Ararat Magazine / Winter 1997, Vol.XXXVIII, No. 149
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1997
Life goes on
between scattered papers
fixed clocks and hands
with no smiles
Life goes into
separate moments
patiently waiting
for the hour
fictions are unmasked
with human touch
Down avenues of nightmare
the future sheds
its skin in public
when you least expect it
and a universe
passes
between us
without a word
Published : Ararat Magazine / Winter 1997/ Vol.XXXVIII, No.149
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1997
The wind draws your laughter
between the branches
of a Judas tree
and waits for night to fall
my arms carve a circle
around cold shoulders
and the day falls into the sun
escaping shadows
honed by clock hands and light bulbs
A door opens and the world
walks in with lost feet
the rest are burning
like frightened children
nothing gets through
the hole in my eye
silhouettes seize names
along the brows of curtained windows
where betrayal is held
like a pair of dice
in the palm of a hand
clicking
as they roll
a coded testament
of what is to come
From a ballroom of empty chairs
I drift beneath watery hours
and unbuttoned passages
of smoke and jazz
stretched out before me
on notes of neon air
on the lips of those who drink laughter
from the mouth of a saxophone
and drum wings over quicksilver streets
Sparks leap from the tin can ashes of a nightmare
amusing children who crouch like spiders on sidewalks
listening to street messiahs
hallelujah in the early hours
reciting be-bop notes under the white lip
of a half-eaten moon
Published : Sensations Magazine / Winter 1997
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1997
to MAX
What the sky learned from the birds and wind
was tentative and lonely. The simple words
of sunlight talk me back to earth, but offer no miracle,
only the stale air sinking beneath the blurred shape
of my clothes as I stand guard on Ward B, of Kaiser Hospital,
resting on the white ridged columns of my balled fists.
My son’s smooth face breathes out morphemic dreams
into the traffic 4 flights below. My laments
fall through an hourglass
in search of wings. Life inches like a flame
down the white body of a candle, until it forgets
to remember what came before.
…Inside his dream,
I watch the hole in his heart
look back at me like a looking glass.
I stick my hand into the dark space
of his life, reaching for a latch
or umbrella, and come up empty.
Through a cloud of ether, I see
my grandmother rise from her death
and stiffen a thread of skin with spit
for the eye of a needle. Her words
are ancient tongues as she works
to stitch the silence that divides his life…
When I look up a community of gulls slips
over white flecked rooftops that drop suddenly
into San Francisco Bay, dark islands of rain
follow closely behind. The doctor sweeps
like a scythe over a landscape of electrical pulses,
bearing endless scrolls of digital graffiti that make no promises.
My grandmother shuffles back
to heaven, forgetting to invite me.
I look for another country,
having no power to rescue my child
from the doctor’s “kind words.â€
Published : The Rockford Review , Winter, 2000; Ararat Magazine, Spring 1997
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1997
Across vacant fields
winter replaces the landscape
with a white tablecloth.
I wait for sleep
in a kitchen of dreams.
I piece together
what has disappeared,
listening to my children
turn my life
like the pages of a book.
In my absence certain words
cling to windows
with breaths of icicles,
I erase the letters,
leaving a voice with nothing to say.
My children wake me;
a chance few get
before the wind returns
to claim our shoes.
Published : Whole Notes Magazine / Spring 1997
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1997
The fragrance of dusty hallways
connect themselves
in halos of smoke
under the last light of day.
A furious sun spreads out
along blue veined avenues,
arriving and departing,
awakening out of breath
into loud echoes
of human spirit,
broken and carried,
like leaves in the wind.
I tremble with nocturnal wings
against omens the stars embroider
on the moon’s half-face.
Her luminous mouth drinks
the shadow of a dark cloud
with promises of things to come.
We find in each other’s touch, a sentence
of perfection, vanishing as it appears.
an eternity of words
settles into a drop of ink.
I enter you
through a sea of vertigos,
remembering to live again.
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1995
Outside night
holds its breath
threatening
to fold early.
Thunder crumbles
Into the sound of rain,
Blurring sidewalks
Into a labyrinth
Of ghostly altars.
Marooned in
the last moment of dark,
I rise in a vapor
an owl drifts with something of the last
fixed in her grasp.
Before the lights go on,
stars flex their dark selves
in words we will never understand;
and where the moon falls yellow
into an orange bed,
I am off,
my space uncut,
through dark kingdoms
bending to blow
the light from each star.
Published : Published: Whisper Magazine / Winter 95
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1995
He stands
in a doorway
where winter begins
dreaming to sleep
to be still
enclosed in a journey
where real names
scar the faces
of his fingers
with cloudy skies
During brittle hours
of embrace
he no longer is afraid
of exile or wintry arms
detaching themselves
from touch
At twilight
unspoken shapes
weld themselves
into something
he can remember
in the darkness
of an early rain
In the darkness
unraveling down
long corridors
he goes thin
a single light
between walls that widen
into a shadow when one looks
for what is hidden
in promises left behind
Published : Muddy River Review Winter/1996; Eclipses: A Book Of Poems and Images (Dark Sky Press,1995)
no comments | posted in Poetry
1995
As clear as a door closing,
our silence listens
to the afternoon decompose
into grains of broken time.
We act to separate ourselves
from ourselves
without waste or necessity.
All warnings fall
like leaves
into water,
and the weather makes it
impossible to hang on
in a life where dreams
live forever.
My exile stiffens
into cold shapes
held by the fingertips
of the wind.
Forgetting the way home,
your voice sings
into the open road
like a delicate thread
seeking the eye of a needle.
Published : Poet / Spring 1995/ Vol.6, No. 1
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1995
Our cups, half empty, wait
as if in a dream.
We decompose the afternoon
into a kingdom where life
is forever repeating itself.
We separate into walls
whitening with departure.
The motion of our love
brings up nothing but antibodies.
All vital signs drop like leaves
when the weather makes it
impossible to hang on.
I am here sweeping up
the broken pieces of sunlight
before the quarrel goes further.
You’ve left me shipwrecked,
watching wind thin itself
into a delicate thread,
that seeks the eye of a needle.
Published : Whisper Magazine , Winter 1995
no comments | posted in Poetry
1995
This one, who ticks like a bomb,
bites the world into decimals
even though everyone goes.
His altitude is perfect;
oblivion widens
in the wake of his footsteps.
Before him, tools of industry
nail down eternity
into suburban forests.
Look how he goes
with geometric blueprints
of a shrunken world
wrinkled in his fist.
He cultivates his life
like his front lawn.
Look , after him, earth
is eaten by the darkness
of his imagination.
This one, who threads
horizons with electric light;
invents alphabets at the drop of a hat,
erasing memory into a sea of anxiety.
Look how the kiss of love
mushrooms above his head
into a red hydrogen cloud.
And there is no mistake
when he arrives at the end
of a forgotten phrase,
connecting what remains,
connecting what remains.
Published : Blue Collar Review / 1995
no comments | posted in Poetry
1995
Of course children liked her
ancient voice and the way
her silver hair wore the wind
like a calico scarf. Feathered hands
charmed the weather in a simple
motion, candled passages
where each breath had been.
Dragon dreams and wicked spells
looked for a man
on a white horse
to dispel the gospel of certainty.
Listening, we darkened ourselves
into shadows among the oak chairs,
preparing for the long silences
the afternoon inherits.
Published : The Midwest Quarterly Autumn/1995 Anthology Of Magazine Verse Yearbook of American Poetry (Monitor Book Company) 1997
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1995
Outside night holds its breath
and the moon’s half-face
drinks the shadow of a cloud,
blurring sidewalks into a labyrinth
of ghostly altars. Marooned between
a common life and things to come,
I rise in a vapor beneath the language
of shoes. An owl drifts with something
of the last fixed in her grasp. Silhouettes
pretend sleep on long benches of dream.
Stars flex their dark selves
into words we shall never understand.
And where the moon falls yellow
into an orange bed, I am off,
my space uncut,
through neon kingdoms
bending
to blow the light
from each star.
Published : Whisper Magazine / Winter 1995
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1995
On an unnamed shore
my wintry life
hides inside
a turquoise sunset.
Where someone shakes
a tablecloth of breadcrumbs,
I wait worn
in a motionless wind,
dreaming of quick flight.
Dropping my shoulder
into the glint of a new moon,
I hesitate
shaping darkness
into stanzas sung by mermaids
in seaside shanties.
When the moon is missing,
my voice becomes
an untuned piano
that calms the spirits
of wanderers, evaporating
under a cloud of suspicion.
My uneven appetite
stands in the doorway
of another man’s pocket.
And along the horizon,
I am followed by a sea of children
across an alphabet of footsteps,
only to find
the keys to the kingdom
no longer fit.
no comments | posted in Poetry
1995
To Clifford Hunt
Rising out of the past, implications
multiply at the end of each day
with statistics and burning cities.
the familiar silence
avoids objects and light,
keeping sound empty
without a trace of dust or age.
We watch the wind tug at accurate, glassed spaces
and remember wild, green places
we can lean toward
to locate ourselves.
Wherever loneliness rises
in an echo of itself,
we come together and plant a garden
of jazzed hieroglyphics.
beneath platoons of plumed clouds,
we create an alphabet of moments.
content with possibility and existence.
In the presence of the unknown
our voices invent an essential unity
a fresh hemisphere, with no vocabulary.
The Pacific flows nowhere,
but continues to knock at the door.
On Medio Street the laughter of our children
agrees on an identity and takes
the shape we live by.
Between the traffic
of human syllables,
and something you said
focuses the distance
into a threshold
beyond the eye’s edge.
Published : Published: Ararat Magazine / Spring 1995
no comments | posted in Poetry, Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1994
Words I write
swim like a second
darkness
between stars.
What is uncertain
is direction, a poem
that begs to be read aloud.
Through dreams I go back
and make a path of X’s
through an endless snowfall
of calendars. I abbreviate
the landscape with hunger
paralyzing each voice
I encounter with betrayal.
In another light
I stand in my shadow
like a word
on the tip
of someone’s tongue.
Published : Poets On / Summer 1994
no comments | posted in Poetry
1994
The day takes nourishment
from their struggle
but if you remain like a leash
with the skulls of yesterday
around your neck
I will teach you to forget
the coming of the cold
lying beneath two continents
as if you were a blade of green
blind and nude
appearing in the snow
before the footless wind
enters your solitude
and begins to speak
Published : Sensations Magazine, Winter 1994-95; Poetry Review, Fall 1999
no comments | posted in Poetry
1994
Paralyzed at the window, my eyes
are between storms, quick traces
of blue break the gray cover of sky.
My life fattens on bills.
My family’s wonderment
at my lack of ambition
grows from the field of voices
I irrigate daily. My dictionary
is thin. I pin memories
like wet clothes to windows and chairs,
observing each with a third eye.
When my back turns, crows swoop in
and pickpocket the landscape,
leaving particles of life,
I piece together
into a vague puzzlement
of bones.
Published : The Small Pond Magazine of Literature / Spring 1994
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1994
As it rains, she rains
a labyrinth of soft lusts.
She puts off the human care love wills.
Outside it rains and she rains.
Into desperate rivers
age charts one destination
through a sea of dreams.
Into narrow channels
the heart speaks, innocence hangs
and the flesh darkens
when she wills love and care,
her door stands empty and open.
In woolen nights her watery hair
unravels its threshold of loneliness
with a fierce indifference
to the heart’s frightened weathers.
And love wills in dark moments human care,
as it rains, she is the rain.
Published : Sensations Magazine Summer/1994
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1994
Even your words
hold their tongue,
coiling into a mouth
of white sand.
All night you and I
hide from the wind
tracking photographs
scattered like leaves
in the attic with flashlights,
looking for missing links
between negatives.
The moon tattoos
words of salt on the dark windows
of our tongues and something we forgot
to say turned like a doorknob in a stranger’s hand.
Dust clouds drill
our hollow eyes
into an open sky,
pulling earth
in all directions.
Whether I move
backward or ahead,
an overcoat of ambivalence stalks
between us with a great thirst.
We pretend to go
beyond what we’ve learned.
And from the oasis
of your shadow,
a promised rain
sprays through me
like a blizzard of stones.
Published : Sensations Magazine 1994; Arizona Literary Magazine Award 1994
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry
1994
To Marcia
A rapier’s skill with scissors
and comb, she sculpts
a feast of heads
under spells of magic.
Her motion dances
toward the sea, turning
a silvery halo of age
into a moment of youth.
The rhythm of her hands
shape and color
secrets of wintry forests
where African drums beat
a fevered song at the end
of a breaking wave,
she recites odes
into ears of seashells,
pirouetting between
dance floors of clouds
and litanies of falling hair.
no comments | posted in Poetry, Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s
1994
To Loretta
Her mythology sings
to a lifeless world
the symphony of the sea
from rock aisled balconies.
Leaving a trace of fog
through candles of narcissus,
her hands work late
flowering
over a concrete environment.
where birds slide
along the shadowy arms
of telephone wires;
where twilight
filters through her hand
like sand that rises
under white hooded waves.
her invisibility
trembles with curiosity
over unshed tears
A halo of salt reflects
veils of mist
in her watery hair,
as she rises
with a clear voice
from the chalice of the Pacific,
unlocking the ears of a silent planet.
no comments | posted in Walking the Pacific Coast Trail / 1990s, Poetry