Friday, January 8, 2010

I am Atlas


I am my Grandfather's wristwatch,

still-framed - reaching my left hand

across into eye's reach


the weight of the world

unsteady across my shoulders.

I am a bloom in the shade


stretching my neck

towards sunlight waiting

for rain to fall on fresh petals.


The droplets strobing down,

I am the time it takes each splatter

to move under foundations

of the stone beneath


your cellar--I am the mortar

holding your insides together,

safe from the downpour.


I am the lock and I am the key

on an old wooden frame.

I am the light illuminating your shame;


I am the crooked chair you'll sit on

when it rains.

Friday, January 1, 2010

Untuned Melody

His words like ice,
swords that slice the center
of my gravity--devoid of meaning,
weighing down like a rain covered tarp.

"Win some, lose some," he says,
as I pick up the paint brush,
making delicate strokes along the baselines
of a room meant for his lover.

But I was there, I swear I was,
splitting wood in the sideyard,
mowing lawns, and going to golf outings.
He erased me every chance he got.

I was a mole in his basement - blind
and without a place to hide, open
for all interpretation and malice.
His smile was like a full moon
on a star filled night, blocking out

the serenity of everything surrounding it.
His chortle a constant beckoning
for me to bequeath some misplaced vanity
between only the two of us.

The way he chewed his gum, mouth slightly open,
mashing two sets of dentures together;
the way he softly hummed the lullabies
of his favorite country tunes

reminded me of younger days--
rides in an attached seat on vintage bicycles.
Removing training wheels and falling
asleep on his lap while mowing the lawn.

I was there; I swear I was.
But our song sang like an untuned melody,
chords that would never sing in rhyme.