Tuesday, November 14, 2006

The Clinch Mountain Review 2006

Swarm

Near the end, she spoke as if waking from a dream
to common light,
her fingers on the bedclothes
untying words to loose like petals of fog.

Whenever her husband’s bees
swarmed from their hives, the noise
like a saw inside her pulse, she had to run
after them and bang a kettle with a big spoon,
a sound the escaping swarm would take for thunder
and settle on a branch to be caught and housed.

She cried then, she said---just sat and wept,
every time she saw the bees betrayed---
and couldn’t explain,
ringed by shocked children, the sound
of the angry swarm,
that followed her across decades:
bees, their penned fury.



Pond

Self-ironist on the mirrored bank,
I trick the pond to life with a pebble
and speak, haloed by the water’s trouble:
“Carp, cynic and fat by your sewage drain,S
will you nudge among these slimy stones
when I am perfected to a pile of bones,
softening beneath the caustic rain?”

The wind, for only answer, harries
a rattle of newsprint into the trees.

Rutting dragonflies twist in couples,
green as rotting bronze, and kiss their doubles.
Bold again after a minute’s quiet,
profuse frogs yell themselves hoarse
by heaps of garbage, a discourse
on the tadpoles’ choreography.
Old car batteries seep and bubble.

The slow carp oozes through mud,
mud-fleshed owner of the lower sludge,
easing past broken bottles to draw
little prey within the circuit of his jaw.

1 comment:

sam of the ten thousand things said...

James, both poems are wonderful. The imagery in stanzas three and four of "Pond" is powerful.

But, Swarm takes off the top of my head. The closing stanza is the definition of perfect. Wow.

Thanks for posting.