Saturday, January 24, 2015

On Passion




On Passion

Mama used to sit and sew
 long into the night.
My room was near the corner in the hall
where her Singer sat.
I’d hear busy feet tap a pedal.
I’d hear a whizzzzzz and steady throb of needle,
I’d hear nimble fingers turning edge and thread.
And every now and then,
I’d hear Mama murmur something like, “Yes, Fern” 
as she talked herself through a patch.

Mama was a perfectionist with stitch.
Thread in.
Thread out.
The lines had to track a perfect trail.
No strings lost track.
No garment shrugged.
The sleekest silks draped straight.


Mama loved to dress.
She’d fuss and bother over every fit.
Sometimes she'd take a trip to town
to eye a window's special.
Come Sunday morning
she'd have the look cut and sewn
and showcased 
upon her tiny frame.

Unlike Mama,
I never took to handiwork,
or to the layers of fabrics filling
closets in our home.
But I understood.
My slip was to be lost in some similar nook.
The same I felt with book and light
while under cover
or on a limb, or in a loft,
or with a pen and writing
while sprawled across the floor.
The hours were never long enough,
the moments though extended,
even spread across a night.

© T A Price 2014

(Singer photo wikimedia commons)

Friday, January 23, 2015

Intrinsic


I should have been a pair of ragged claws
Scuttling across the floors of silent seas.
~ T.S. Eliot (1888–1965). The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. 
Prufrock and Other Observations. 1917
 divider leaf

                                           INTRINSIC

The light and goodness
do not sustain
before I find myself
seeking the dim night
the dim fade
the dim close
the dim murder
of the day.
If I were an artist,
I’d choose the river gumbo
mined for my display.
Mud marbles.
Mud ornaments.
Mud dried
quick cracked.
Black tar thick
upon my hands
’til fired and hollowed
core on muralled walls.
If I were a throaty note,
I’d be one final
lingering draw,
the oak and smoke
remnant bit
of Booker charcoal
in the bottom
of some
mahogany glass.
If I were your eyes,
I’d be the cataracts
removed after
robbing your sight,
your strength,
your resolve to fight,
to draw,
to live,
to sing,
to love,
to survive.
To even drink
again with gusto,
but without the loss
of love, of fame,
of a good woman’s shame.
That would be I.
One craggy pair of claws
claiming green irides
for what will never be,
but for I alone
in the dark,
in the deep
in the blue
of the
blackest sea.

Published:  (1) Open Salon (Scupper poems)
(2) Fictionique, 2012: http://fictionique.com/?p=17471

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