20 May 2013

Canada and the USA

File:Peacearchuscanadaborder.JPG
The Peace Arch on the US-Canada Border 
between Washington and British Columbia in 2007


Rush's LakesidePark recalls how youth fades
around historical carnival days
recognizing colonialism
with Victoria Day,  quiet revolt
with National Patriot’s Day, winter’s
end and summer’s start, rest days for the heart:
we “gather on the twenty fourth of May
Sitting in the sand to watch the fireworks ….” 

Across the border this past colony
enjoys royal visits, casts MLK
sings “My country‘tis of thee” to the tune
of "God Save the Queen" and loves irony
served with its holidays, fireworks and all.






Go HERE for more information on the location and history of Lakeside Park.


Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast



19 May 2013

Stone throwing

File:Mount Hood reflected in Mirror Lake, Oregon.jpg
Mount Hood reflected in Mirror LakeOregon, USA.


Mirrors
Fresh water pools
Hold our faces roughly
Ripple at pebbles skipped and jibes 
Tossed across reputations shattering 
Pride of conifers, Trust of sky, 
Love of shore and mountain,
Destinations
Mirror



Posted for Grace's Sunday Mini-Challenge: Rictameter at Imaginary Garden with Real Toads.


Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast



18 May 2013

To Be a Butterfly

From the 1988 Production of M. Butterfly




Does he know he is staring?
I look down but feel his eyes
sweeping for "radioactivity."


I want to laugh! He thinks I
am a woman, but I am better
than a woman, I am an actor!


Our chemistry will add ease
and pleasure to the assignment--
but he is closeted from himself.


My Comrade can never know
I am gay--only that I am willing
to spy undercover. Laws forbid.


And my target can never know
I am gay--he may prefer his fantasy
to my reality; truth may kill him.


Truth on all sides will surely kill me
unless time grows the seed of love--
I need only one miracle to be free.



Posted for Kelvin's "Poetics: 'Asians are ugly!' " at dVerse Poets Pub.  For the thinking behind this poem see "Stereotypes are Ugly" on my Blog.


Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast




17 May 2013

More Time

Artwork by Chelsea Bednar


Clock
w a t c h
ing     loose-
ns  ends of each
class   hour   talk  and 
trees e-                    ven-ly
ring                                         me
and near                            your toes

O
artist
back      up

tick tick tick tick

wear one     ankh on
each an-                 kle and
re-mem-                   ber time
does not                        end nor
wait and          we won't entomb
its secrets   while the trees survive




Conceived  for Artistic Interpretation with Margaret based on  Chelsea's drawing at Imaginary Garden with Real Toads.  The Ankh (bottom left) made me think of Egypt and sand and forever.  It also made me think in pyramids and triangular principles of focus.  And so, here we are.


Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast




16 May 2013

Will, or Potatoes

Baked Potato with Butter


(1)

Volition sounds stronger than velleity
but that is no reason to prefer it.

Velleity can linger as long as
it pleases—or exist at a level
of potential—like bags of potatoes.

Volition is a ready-set-go full
commitment—like potatoes peeled and hot,
lobster boiled red, corn broiled dark on the grill,
two or more plates set out on the table.

And if the merely present grow stronger,
time will show; and if they refuse to go,
time will know when to bring them to the feast;
and time will show their worth in bringing spuds
seasoned, thriving—or merely surviving.


(2)

Of course, take this with a grain of sea salt
if you have no potatoes bagged or cooked,
if food is scarce in your life, or if you
have not learned to cook—then ask what you will
whether meal, job, home, or way to cope with
dreams when nothing brings nothing and nothing
more—and  I who have little (but enough)
will have phenomenologists explain
the uses of hunger and conflicting
alternatives like refusing to eat
potatoes or nothing but potatoes
or starvation or loss, great grief, real loss

O!  Let this poem be simile, not more!
Our will—to be free—needs choices galore.




I wrote and posted these two related sonnets for Anna's Meeting the Bar: Volition & Velleity at dVerse Poets Pub.

Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast





15 May 2013

Wendy's World

File:Tinkclose-1-.jpg
Tinker Bell (2005, bronze)* 
by Diarmuid Byron O'Connor


Tinker Bell’s fairy dust
enabled flying or dreams
not both—pencil or paper,
day or night, youth or age,
male or female—and so
her blessing was a curse
for Wendy and like-minded
females who had tales to tell
males who could not listen,
who wanted and want without
ever reaching satisfaction
but gleefully play on.

Wendy wanted more than
playing house, sewing and
tucking little boys into bed
every night; she sketched
her desires on the thinnest
toilet paper in the moon-
marked room while her
charges snored; and she blew
her creations out the one
moon-cut window to waiting
squirrels who scampered off,
carrying Wendy’s texts.

She wrote anonymously
but in her own blood, a
signature too authentic
to ignore—so discoverers
hoarded her words as if
saint’s relics and created
a book of them on archive-
quality paper which one
day Wendy recognized
on her library’s reference
shelf and borrowed by
sliding it into her overcoat.

Laughter rang out from
never-never land as Wendy
read the precious tome—
twice—in the outhouse where
she had written it in the light
from a tiny crescent moon
window; then she recycled
it page after page as toilet
paper and as new letters to
her faithful readers, thinking
If God ever spoke, she is still— 
laughing—and if not, I will.



An old story I cleaned up to post for Kim's Verse First ~ A Place in The Universe at Poets United and for Mrsupole's Theme Thursday for May 16, 2013 - CREATIVITY.  



Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast




14 May 2013

Home blossoms

Begonia Corallina-Hybrids
Pic by: User:BotBln



Door opens
Color and scent crowds
Affectionately
Hall runner flies me in

Green plants bow me toward
Golden kitchen water jug
Tenderly
I visit each of them

Meows pull me upstairs
To join kitty in bed rest
We inhale each other
Accusations turn to purrs

But the bedroom is blue
And I have more to do
In red and cream
Downstairs

Boot up the computer
Tear open the mail
Send the requisite “I’m Home
Email and status update

Angel-wing Begonias
Grew pink hearts 
Anticipating 
My return



Posted at Imaginary Gardens with Real Toads for 

Open Link Monday.




Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast



10 May 2013

On the train

foggy Hudson River and Catskill Mountains from the train


(1) The First Leg

slowly eerie at first
no water in coach-class
but sun shines just the same

after Trenton we speed up
past school-bus orange road graters
arms raised to show their muscles
oddly idle 45 minutes south of the Big Apple
duplicate houses and lumber
yards and electric grids

spindly trees,young and growing
or old and depleted shield
towns from transport

more tools of roads and tracks
unmanned though muscular stand
(train windows as their best audience)
an army ready to advance their lines
wherever and whenever ordered


(2) The Second Leg

scenic Hudson River, water in coach
and in the sea-wide shore-less bed
humble majesty, coast guard defense

lighthouses crouched so long amid
rocks and rising waves of water
that people forget they are military,
window shoppers lift up their eyes

Palisades, Storm King and Hunter
slopes, ski trails and forests hugging
thruways and muffled traffic as swift
as the Hudson's channels, much faster
then tugboats and laden barges


(3) The Body

Full spring and its flood levels
whistle hoo-hoo signaling
Hudson depot where white and
purple lilacs garland and scent

where an elderly man sits small
with pipe, newspaper and baseball
cap on a shaded bench until
he sees conductor lifting down
a familiar suitcase and his daughter
until he takes her bag and hugs

she shushes her brain buzz
until she finds paper and pen
alone after dinner, after smiles,
tales and lots of family loving

she returns season in and out
measuring her changes against
unchanging tracks, repeated
greetings, gestures, arguments
only a little more wear 
only a little more weary 
only a little more silent
 Train station, Hudson, NY, USA. 
Supposedly oldest station in New York in continuous use; photo by Daniel Case.



Posted for OpenLinkNight ~ Week 96 at dVerse Poets Pub where Claudia is hosting.


Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast


 
 
 

08 May 2013

Getting On With It


File:Lead Horse Carousel Philly.JPG
Dentzel Carousel at Please Touch Museum in Philadelphia, by Smallbones.

Giddy rider 
abandons hair to wind
fills ears with screams
reaches for rings wanting gold
getting tin once, twice, thrice, always
wooden horse rising and falling
her mouth locked in grins
she lifts, leans out further, too far 
gasping gaping grasping to win
but tin—no bronze, no gold—
anxiety rises until
wearily she drops hand, arm, grin
weakly slides from saddle
to puddle near horse’s hooves
on their turning table
finds knees finds feet wobbles
to a stand up and step down
until grounded
she sees the carousel
and walks away
dropping tin rings 
to lighten her load.





Posted for Kim Nelson's  Verse First ~ Poetry Heals at Poets United.  Kim prompt first inspired a longer poem "Writing as Healing."  Please visit it when you have a minute.  

"Getting On With It" is also influenced by Buffy Sainte-Marie singing "Carousel":






Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast