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Visiting
my dead grandmother's cottage with my father in the forests
of Lithuania: 1966.
Visiting
her cottage I remember ripe ears of corn,
drawers
full of bent knives, mouldy crusts of pumpernickel bread,
high
shelves of hoary berry jams, curtains threadbare and torn,
and
an axe brighter than the cracks in the wall near a bed
bereft
of her broken body for three months and one week.
Through
a veranda window I recall a thistled yard,
and
still hear portents issuing from a fat raven's beak.
A
bucket of stagnant water mirrors the cloudy lard
she
must have fried eggs and coffee grinds in every morning.
And
by a potato patch I see a wild war-like pig,
with
its head full of demons, palavering and snorting.
And
I shout something and ineptly cast a birch's twig
while
my father speaks to an old peasant in a strange tongue
about
pagan deities carved on trees when he was young.
--first
published in Cedar Hill Review (print; USA)
Poem
in October
On
this breezy October morn, I walk
in
the swift shadows of cloud-cursing rooks,
watching
the world wake on the horizon.
In
the brush I hear the tangerine talk
of
blackbirds, and, in a crumbling wall's nooks,
the
tumult of thrushes halving a bun.
And
I see the first cart of dawn turning
the
corner, see its owner's toothless grin
amid
a pile of leaves lit by the sun.
And
I smell the scent of something burning,
of
something smouldering deep within,
fouler
than all the hills of Polish dung.
Thirty-five
years have transformed my life's leaves
into
an outcast's smoke upon the breeze.
--first
appeared in Poetry Nottingham (print; England)
Susan
Say
a prayer for Susan, the sad leper of my tongue.
She taught me the ways of love, how to down hard whisky,
how to watch the rooks above the rowans, ever young
and ready to spread her legs in amorous pity.
Say
a prayer for that girl with limbs limp now in the eaves
among the mud of past autumns, among the sins of
whore-masters and cheap fates found in fortune cookies,
among the sweet breaths and buttocks of much-needed love.
Say
a prayer for old whoredom and for the happiness
she
gave a few lonely men in the dark for a while.
Say
a prayer, say a prayer, for her and good-heartedness.
She
flies above the rowans with a flock of rooks now,
flies
above my whisky as I long for her living flesh,
and
have one for her soul as mistaken as her smile.
--first
appeared in Candelabrum (print; England)
If
not for your silence
'If
not for your silence, I could perceive
and
not bitterly mourn loved ones, not grieve
the
minutes of my life that pass away,
but
bravely and eagerly yield each day,
fearless
in the face of war and disease.
'That
my journey here is but a short stay
I'd
rejoice, and send no complaints your way;
I'd
surrender body and soul at ease,
if not for your silence.
'Even
with tearful eyes, I'd never pray
for
intervention, nor cling to the clay
that
clads my bones, but prepare to leave
this
world for yours, and steadfastly believe
that
you can defeat both death and decay,
if not for your silence.'
--first
appeared in Weyfarers (print; England)
^
Biography
My
poetry has appeared in scores of magazines on both sides of
the Atlantic, among humbler titles in: American Jones, ArtWord
Quarterly, Blue Unicorn, Cedar Hill Review, Envoi, The MacGuffin,
Poetry Notingham, Staple, Sulphur River Literary Review, The
Tennessee Review, Visions International, and The Windsor Review.
38 years old, I live with my wife and three sons in Gliwice,
Poland, where I work as a translator. Together with David
Castleman, who lives in California, I co-edit Mandrake Poetry
Review. www.angelfire.com/pe/TheMandrakePress/index2.html
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