Poetry
SONGS CAPTIVATE THE TRAVELER (from THE SAUNA IS FULL OF MAIDS)
Could it be a sha-man, or a sha-woman blows through this
wind and water? Joik; poetry; exoneration. Songs captivate
the traveler. Human-animal-stone-tree. Rituals, rivalries.
We tried to find my spirit guide in her Brooklyn apartment. Is
Is it a turtle, a rabbit, a magpie? We don’t know.
The Hebrew word for soul, nephesh denotes all animal life.
Poems begin and end as songs. How can the cuckoo bless a forest
if only one tree is left unfelled?
I dwell in the Northland for inspired intervals. Lapland. Ostrobothnia.
Helsinki. Troms-Finnmark. Tampere.
I apologize for my Americanness. The sound of my voice,
Voice of my sounds interferes with sky shapes.
Impatient with what separates us. Meet me again soon..
Silence. River I miss your shadows.
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Another poem, “Gulf of Finland,” from THE SAUNA IS FULL OF MAIDS
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Article about Cheryl J. Fish in Tribeca Citizen: “Poetry about 9/11 that reverberates today” (May 19, 2020) Includes a poem from Crater and Tower.
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“I Never Had a Daughter,” from Mom Egg Review.
I NEVER HAD A DAUGHTER
I never had a daughter
who play-acted feelings she could not articulate,
a busted doll in hand.
Who wrote poems and scored goals.
Who asked, “mother, who was your first love?
Who was your third?”
I never had a daughter who
flipped tangled hair
outside texting among six friends
Spooning ice cream into their firm, fool mouths.
One friend spoke too frankly so my girl cried.
Then she blindsided
My every try every tale of recounting
mother’s old ordeals.
I never had a daughter
of charm or dismay.
Rebellious clingy
After snapping and snarling
she’d hug me round the knees.
To have raised a child on one’s own
a fever pitch of
errors and trials begun at age 40.
So my only son, he never had
A sister.
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U N D U L A T I O N
(excerpt of poem that appeared in Talisman)
So many boats cruise by
awakening criss-crosses
in Jersey's pierced
hourglass
this is the Rhine, or
up the Seine, it's about proper
width and color, almost palpable.
Radiant sun
releases apologies, a million
little frogs...
It's your move.
Come at me straight.
Anywhere isn't elsewhere
the sun sinks earlier
and earlier
September a reminder
of purpose--
the writing in the book.
This is the Hudson:
strange glistening body
out my window...
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OFF SIDE
(Appeared in Gyroscope Review 16.4, 2016, p. 39) – http://joom.ag/162Q
Prepared for rain, we arrive early wearing ponchos
Search for soccer field number two, Red Hook, Brooklyn
In striking distance of Ikea’s flagship
Stockholm-on-the-Gowanus
Blackened factories, ships’ containers
Trucks fire up tacos, serve plantains and guava drinks
Our team gets called off-sides
Again and again, a whistle, a hand, nothing counts
A foot might wedge or pivot in air
And end up east or west, anywhere
They don’t stand a chance against the bulky Latino strikers
elbows gnash their bony-boy physiques
in fancy uniforms, shiny red-and-yellow cleats
Our coach’s panicky indignation fails to ignite passion
The ball arrives first
The others barrel it into our net when we miss
Their siblings’ mock-kick on the sidelines, a dog runs on the field.
Losing takes grace.
I head to the truck for a shake
Amid whistles, bewilderment
One boy boots a crushed Pepsi can
Into the blinding sun.