Category Archives: Literary

Newly Published Poems, by Sandra Kohler

Published in the magazine “Ginosko, No 15” , by Sandra Kohler

The Name of Our Nature
The creek’s a blade of light that cuts
morning. I’m flat, blank. I’m afraid I’m
losing my subject: intense interactions
of the human heart. My head’s a chaos
of shreds and patches. I need a grandchild,
a roomer, an affair. I need to tie red
rags to my black suitcases so they signal
me from the carousels, wave brightly as
they fly by. I need bananas I need time,
an hour or two of a light that’s not broken,
breaking. Why do we love what scares us?
In my dream, it’s snakes: my son tries to
keep them away from me, but here they
slither, two long ones. He insists we kill
and eat the old dog that belongs to us.
Afterwards, I complain to my husband,
“who do you think actually had to do
the killing?” I will slay the old dog of
our sorrows and cook him to feed my son,
yet I won’t eat the flesh, consume what I
have prepared. I don’t believe a word I’m
saying but truth has nothing to do with
my assent or refusal. These tales will not
exist unless I invent them. It’s Heraclitus
I need here, for the right enigma. As I raise
the knife, the dream dog insists “you are
my sister.” I’m torn to pieces. Who shall
I play with, my son or the dog? How do
I choose, what do I turn to game that is
deadly earnest? What earnest can I give
of what my heart intends? The name
of our nature is longing.

Influx

Tuesday’s rain is so gray I need to turn on lights
in the morning kitchen. Tuesday after a holiday,
so Tuesday doubled with Monday meaning:
resumption of the routine, real. I come back up
to the bedroom where my husband’s sleeping, wrap
a blanket around me instead of a robe, stare out
at the wet green grayed world, remembering that
in my dream a tribe of children are visiting, I put
them all to bed in different places in the house,
makeshift arrangements, realize there’s an extra:
a baby abandoned not on my doorstep but in
my bedroom, bed. I take him in, wondering why
he turned up, whose he is, accepting his presence
as part of this influx of children, a new regime
in my life’s history. Outside, cars on wet roads,
the sound that’s woken me for a string of days,
continual, replicated: an iteration of Tuesdays.
The east’s layered mass, gray to muddy taupe,
heavy, fraught. A line of local geese goes over,
heading north. I am going to drink my coffee,
empty my bladder, put on different shoes
and an attitude in which I can walk and talk
like the ordinary gods. I am going to make do,
make love, make poems, make a life incisive
as the vee of geese that goes north as I write.
I am going to be ready for what day doesn’t
bring and unready for what it does.

 

Ode to Taxes

Poem from Bette Keck Peterson, December 2013

ODE to TAXES
This year I paid no income tax,
On certain holdings I posses,
Having an equity in wind,
A lien on each day’s loveliness.
I shared a mortgage with the sun,
Collected interest from the sea,
The autumn rains and winter storms,
Paid extra dividends to me .
I watched my revenues increase,
The total of my balance mount.
Now more than I can ever spend,
Is credited to my account.

Poems

Sandra Kohler (Sandy Iger) has three poems in the Fall, 2013 issue of Prairie Schooner, a fine old literary magazine. You can probably find copies at a good bookstore or library, or order a single copy from Prairie Schooner, 123 Andrews Hall, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0334.

[Ed. note:  You were also able to read one of Sandy’s poems, “On My Seventieth Birthday I Try To Skinny-Dip in Boston Harbor” featured on the web site, Poetry Daily, on Sunday, September 29th, 2013. If you went to  http://poems.com/    On that day only it was there to read.]

Meanwhile, she’s received permission from Prairie Schooner to post one of the other two poems, below, on the class website. (A gracious decision, since they don’t usually permit such publication for work in a current issue).

Gray Storm

A gray storm of a day: weather I’d usually
welcome, but this morning, after yesterday’s trip
to say goodbye to a dying woman, its bleakness

echoes, weighs. Overnight, email from a friend
who wonders if he needs a shrink, meds: tells me
during the days he’s full of joy, nights, dread.

This seems natural to me, in touch with reality.
Earlier this week the Times ran a front page piece
about how people all over, except in parts of

Europe and the United States, die in pain,
the excruciating pain of burns, AIDS, cancer
because morphine’s not available. It would take

a Dante to imagine this reality. At my dying
friend’s bed, what we speak of, like the souls
in hell, is former joy: our walks last summer

mornings through neglected gardens, fields,
old graveyards, abandoned campgrounds on
the island where she lived as a child; we talked

about plants, flowers, people; the families
we grew up in, our dead parents, married lives,
raising children: all that made us what we

were. Walking, these shards of our past, bathed
in the glancing sunlight, were lit by flashes of
discovery. Forgotten times, unfulfilled desires,

surfacing, float in the day’s shimmering
air, an island of joy in the dark river of what
was happening to her. That river’s crested:

caught in its flood, she seems not to belong
to this world: shrunken, swollen, her head nearly
a skull, her speech blurred, muffled. She will

not talk away a morning’s walk again, summer
or winter, with anyone.  But her wry wit’s intact,
she’s struck by the black comedy of this agon:

the nurse insisting she has to have a shower when,
despite opiates, every movement’s torture. She suffers
most thinking of the pain hers is causing those who

love her: her husband, daughter, son. She’s neither
bitter nor afraid: a resignation which like her faith,
I cannot comprehend. We don’t talk of the future,

only our shared segment of the past. When
it’s time for leave-taking, all we can tell
each other is what we’ll miss: each other.

This poem originally appeared in Prairie Schooner’s Fall 2013 issue.


Short Story

IT’S THE BERRIES by Sue Wheatley Carr, August 2013

berriesThe house that I grew up in was surrounded by blueberries…wild, low-bush in the front and cultivated, high-bush that my father had planted, in the back. Picking berries came soon after learning to walk.

One day in June, after school let out, when I was 7 or so, I trekked up the street at 7am with my big brother, Jack, to pick strawberries. George and Bessie Rounds had a strawberry farm, and kids of all ages picked berries in June, for 2 cents a quart – No, it wasn’t Oklahoma. His mother, Grandma Rounds, kept track of the pickers, telling us to “pick clean” and not to touch the berries because the electricity from our hands would ruin the flavor. I picked 9 ½ quarts that morning – not too bad for a little kid. Grandma Rounds counted out my berries and gave me 19c. There was no rounding off pay-checks, in her field.

Meanwhile, my brother was picking with our cousin, Russell, who was 11. He had on a magnificent white T-shirt. My brother picked a very red and very large strawberry, looked up and saw Russell’s beautiful white back. He let fly with the berry which landed “splat” in the middle of Russell’s back. Unfortunately, Mr. Rounds saw the whole performance and fired my brother on the spot. Jack felt he was fortunate not to have been attacked by Grandma Rounds and her cane.

A few years later, I went to summer camp for two weeks. I had such a good time, I begged to be allowed to return. My father said I could go back for the last week in August if I earned half of the $40.00 that it cost. So, I started picking blueberries at George Rounds’ blueberry patch. This was much easier than picking strawberries, even though they didn’t add up so fast. But, the best thing was that you would get 10 cents a box.

Picking berries brings out the chatty nature of people…So, I would talk to anyone who was close by. An older boy, probably 15 or so, was near me and I started in… Filled with thoughts of my return to camp, I said, “What are you going to do with the money you make?” His answer was, “I’m going to give it to my mother for rent.” Well, that stopped me in my tracks. My dreaming about camp suddenly seemed a little less worthy.

Picking every day for two weeks netted me $18.50. My father allowed as how that was enough of a contribution – and off I went, back to New Hampshire – happy but also a little wiser about other people and their lot in life.

Fast forward, 55 years. Today, I picked blueberries in a “pick-your-own” field.

berrypickingThere were dozens of rows of cultivated blueberry bushes; a net that was strung over the whole field to keep out the birds; 75 or so people, all ages; and each pint cost $2.50. We were told that we could pick anywhere – No one admonished me to “pick clean”. I stood in front of a bush that was dripping with ripe berries – It took my breath away.  It was like the first sip of a gin and tonic on a hot day.  Grandparents and grandchildren  were happily picking together…”Oh, that’s a wonderful box of blueberries”, “You’re a great picker”, etc. Encouragement and happy voices were everywhere.

I picked just shy of 5 pints (in one hour!). When I went to have them measured, the owner said, “We won’t worry about the short pint. Ten dollars will be fine.” My! What a change!… From the “child labor” scene of yesteryear to the “on vacation” field of today.

Berry picking is a religion with me – perhaps because I started so young. But, then maybe it’s because of the wonderful conversations you have or overhear, or being able to cash in on nature’s bounty, or simply being part of a happy scene. Or perhaps it’s the important secrets you pick up…for instance: not everyone has had so easy a life as I have had; some people are scrimpy and others very generous – and which type is to be preferred; and what magnificent fruit is provided by the earth.

If only everyone could have a blueberry patch up the road…

Sue Carr     Brewster     July, 2012

Overheard July, 2013…
”What do you call a sad strawberry.”
I don’t know, what?”  –
“A blueberry!”


Poem

LATE AFTERNOON, by Dottie Smith Mann

This is where I am in my life…
the late afternoon
so full of beauty it cracks my heart.
A sharply defined beauty
nothing fuzzy about it
three dimensioned
the up close and the far away clearly etched
seen by the light of a strong but waning sun.

The evening will come
Let evening come, the poet said.

Not yet though
Let me have the flickering shadows
the wind tossed trees
the soft blue skies
the brllliant sun almost at eye level.
Let me have the distant sounds of a small plane
the workmen down the lane almost done for the week.

Let me have the sun on teak tables and leather chairs
my husband resting upstairs
the shining maple floor
the reflected light on Aunt Anne’s bird sculpture
reminding me of a window on Eden Road looking out to sea.

Oh it cracks my heart and from that space
I feel a current come
A river of joy and love and gratitude
That I am here
in the late afternoon
before the night.


Poem

Cardinal at My Window, by Dottie Smith Mann
 
Everyday he attacks his reflection in the glass
For hours he pecks, pecks, pecks, pecks.
I am saddened by the futility.
And yet perhaps it is just what he needs
Sharpens his beak.  Dulls his beak.
Gets exercise.  Improves his eyesight.
Avoids harmful aggression with other birds.
Stays away from the nest where a brooding female
has no room, or patience, for him.
 
He is not me
Sadness about futility is my emotional reality, not his.
Do I fear that I am banging my head against an uncaring reflective wall?
Does it sadden me that I might be without insight into the reality of my condition?
Does it pain me to hear his clicking metronome of dailiness
while I listen to my heartbeat
and my husband’s
waiting to hear it stop.
 

Short Story

Sunday Morning, June 9, by Liz Hottel Barrett

This morning, we both left the house at 7:30 am. Bryan took our grandson Tucker to BWI airport for a flight to Grinnell College in Iowa.  Tucker is 17, a junior in high school, and works in a research lab at Hopkins.  I took Tucker’s friend Ryan to Penn Station in Baltimore for a train to Charlottesville where his parents would be meeting him. Ryan lives in Denver, and both boys had been with us since Thursday while their parents were at their 25th UVA reunion.  Ryan had never been on a train, so I promised his parents I’d see him safely settled. After dropping off our charges, Bryan and I planned to meet back at church at 10:00.

There was no traffic this morning and we had left plenty of time, so I took Ryan on a last loop of Annapolis — he was fascinated by the colonial “oldness” of the city and excited to see midshipmen in and about town.   Then on to Baltimore with no cars on the road and still plenty of time to have a quick tour of Baltimore’s fun-filled Inner Harbor on the way.  By the time we reached Penn Station, we still had an hour to wait for the train and found parking across the street from the front door; so we went to the restrooms, checked in with the officials, and clarified how much time we had and would have to board the train.  In fact, we asked as many other things as we could think of to ask to make sure there would be no problems on Ryan’s first train trip.

We had a nice leisurely breakfast at a station cafe.  I love the simplicity of that station. No track levels or any decisions to make — just 6 gates all together clearly displayed.  Our train was slightly delayed, and during breakfast the delay increased a bit, but our sandwiches were good and I had my very first bottled Starbucks Frappucino.  What a disappointment after waiting  all those years!  Ryan still had time for the restroom. Me, too.

We were relieved to see our “Cardinal 51” up on the boarding screen because after all the delay, I didn’t want Bryan to worry even though he is the one who purposefully decided not to carry his cell phone with him.  I got Ryan all settled on the train, showed him where the train bathrooms were, and started to leave. Oops.  The already-moving train was heading for DC, and I was on it, powerless to do anything but enjoy the ride.   Bryan is now at a church luncheon and I am on my way from DC to Baltimore to pick up my car.  Ryan is almost to Charlottesville, VA.

Liz Hottel Barrett