Horus
Horus
Falcons abandon the field
when the ancient thirst lifts
them to flight
with wild eyes and
arched wings astride dagger-beaks,
like ancient tridents
on the wind, striking
other birds in flight—
wetting the beak—
cooling the fire—
Horus
Falcons abandon the field
when the ancient thirst lifts
them to flight
with wild eyes and
arched wings astride dagger-beaks,
like ancient tridents
on the wind, striking
other birds in flight—
wetting the beak—
cooling the fire—
Indiana University Annual Poetry Contest, 2011 (Winning Poem)
1850 – Rising
1.
She took the bull
—the breeder,
our entire future
down
the dark trail.
There was no discussion
about mother,
about the guilty
footprints to the butcher.
Father lay dying over
Grandma’s white linens
until he wasn’t anymore.
Suddenly
stew.
2.
She wore her dress,
Sunday’s church,
wading in the river—
watching the men on the bank.
Silently fishing.
3.
She gathered eggs
in the morning.
Warm for cooking.
Scrambled, Over medium, Hard, Poached.
Standing at the stove—
radiating heat.
Humming hymns
to herself.
4.
A winter of lead.
Heavy protestant rafters.
Silent
cold.
Reverent,
tombstone-cold.
Mother burned
the barn in the stove.
5.
The fat summer Grace died—
Blackberries and grapes
Beer and moonshine
Chickens and rabbits
Cooking all day.
All day dirty plates,
all day turning spits—
all the angry ovens.
6.
Fireflies brought recurring dreams
of father
—Father stirring dazzling embers
—Father surrounded by Edison bulbs
—Father snuffing altar candles
—Father swatting burning bees
—Father swinging lanterns in the yard
—fireflies.
7.
I saw Uncle Robert from Colorado
rise
with a full team of horses,
rise
like the cedars do—
over the hill
until he too floated
in-between
the hill and the clouds.
Robert from the mountains
stepped down
to straighten an injured fencepost
and then he drove the jingling team
across the river
to the porch.
He settled in.
8.
Sister Edith converted again.
Sunday church with mother~
wading in the river~
dresses like clinging church bells.
Sister Edith rang.
At last, no longer silent.
*
Five dollars for wedding invitations;
Cordially,
“Robert and Edith”
9.
Mother lived
nine more summers by the river.
Near the end,
she was watched over
by young boys, reverent boys,
sons of Edith, who taught her again
to pick a flat rock,
to hold it sideways,
to throw it in that familiar way
over water and water.
10.
Mother died in the shadow
of the new barn,
where she could hear
young boys laughing.
Up the ladder—
Falling—
Up the ladder—
Falling—
into the yellow
hay below.
11.
It rained the day we tried
to bury mother.
The great pouring of 1850.
It was the kneeling river
drumming,
sobbing,
swelling up
all at once—
rising up, like choir voices
singing loudly, Halleluiah—
taking mother away
in a tiny wooden boat.
The words are whittled in-
to woody planks, tethered
to an Eastern Shore dock—
a petition inscribed by one
who stridently chiseled it in-
to existence. A reverent prayer
now notable to the residents
there. Sometimes sung under
the breath, life-giving
words carried on the crabbing
Chesapeake Bay winds.
I sauntered the dock, nocturnally
beheld the sky there, a spread-
open Milky Way—absent city lights,
a different sky; a curtain
draping the heavens in
an unfamiliar marvel. I exposed
my smallness, a wilted note sung faintly
beneath the remarkable breadth.
From the stilted mooring I sang the words,
singing them over a whittled-under
Harborton prayer, adding where I live now;
“…where I live now.”
Glenn Lyvers
There is an imperceptible popping,
the sound of a groaning railroad-bridge splintering,
its sagging trusses bearing heavy loads
she knows a single car could never abide.
There is a wanting; she can see it,
the thousand-yard stare, something brooding
below the surface, bubbling-up like sulfur
cueing the cliché of an impending geyser.
“I’m going to the American Legion,”
words that halve her heart in-
between holding reins and loosing to the river
her pressing stallion, still unbroken.
She believes the Legion is where kinsmen meet,
where we talk about our railroad-cars,
where they were made, what they carry,
what model, unit, and number they are.
She says we are a Legion of model-train collectors,
like tradesmen with a language of our own—
always the topic is railroad-cars;
we never mention bridges.
Glenn Lyvers
Those who know me, follow my poetry, or simply stumble into my website in some drunken haze, might be interested to know I will be moving soon. I’m living in Virginia Beach right now. In a month or so, I’ll be relocating to Harborton Virginia, a very tiny fishing village (Pop. 130) on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. I’m moving there so I can complete my next book. It’s quiet there, very quiet there, a throwback to better times when the mockingbird in the yard was genuinely entertaining.
I mean to say that I believe I can write there, look out over a road which sees little to no traffic. I can walk the measure of a football field and dangle a string in the water to catch crabs if I want. I could live deliberately in Harborton, like Thoreau, if I wanted–though I’m sure I’ll make a bi-monthly pilgrimage to Sam’s Club, 2 hours away. I’m sure the measure of my life spent in Harborton will color my work, and with some luck, delight my readers.
It’s too loud in Virginia Beach. I can hear my neighbors, and by this I mean I can hear those activities my neighbors engage in which I do not want to hear. Almost every day there are fire trucks, police cars, ambulances passing by blaring their annoying horns. In a house across the street an elderly lady must keep falling down, because the EMT vehicles scream their way to her house, and leave after they have disturbed my life. Yes, it’s a selfish viewpoint and on good days I simply wish her well and pray everything is OK. On bad days, though, when I am already annoyed at my other neighbors, I am fussy at the old broad. “Just go to a nursing home already!” Then I spend hours unhappy with myself, personally ashamed of the man in the mirror who is aging and should be more compassionate.
My fans ask me, “When is your new book coming out?” Some ask, “Where can I buy your new book?” and I have to direct them to my last book which is more distant every day from the work I am doing now. I realize, with disbelief, that I have over ten thousand followers on Facebook, thirty thousand people subscribed to my RSS feed, over a thousand Tweeters Twitting (though I don’t really get it), etc…, in short a bunch of people seem interested in what I do. It must be because I have stood on a box attracting the attention of passersby–I have started a sentence which I have not yet finished. To those who stopped to listen, I owe something, and I do have things to say. I have stories to tell, poems to recite, asides to aside, but even as I stand on the box, my mouth is muffled. It is slightly distorted like the spoken words of the deaf man who cannot hear what he is saying. I cannot hear because it’s just too damn loud in Virginia Beach. I want to speak my next sentence and have the words come out clearly, and to do that (to honor those who are listening) I am moving to Harborton Virginia.