by Janna Amelkin
Fall 2014
Flower 2
by Jan Adler
The Neverweres
by Harriet Sohmers Zwerling
The oldest, with the Cuban father…
a one-night stand in his U.N. office,
would be 55 this year.
The next, Italian, not born in 1961,
would now be aged 53,
and the youngest, only 46.
I expelled them from my womb
with no regrets.
Now, though, old and losing friends,
I think, one might have been a girl,
a loving companion, or a boy,
literary, brilliant, devoted,
or an explorer who took me along
on his adventures.
And the one I kept, now 50 and a father,
would have the siblings he
always wanted, to share in the care
of this old woman,
who asks so much.
Harriet Sohmers Zwerling, a retired teacher and former Paris resident is the author of Notes of a Nude Model, 2004 and Abroad, an Expatriate’s Diaries, 2014. She is also a cinephile and a grandmother.
How to Amaze your Dentist
by Elaine Weisburg
Learn to designate
your teeth by number,
just as dentists do.
If you mention to the doc, say,
“Number five’s a little tender.”
You’ll be met with awe and shock
especially if he’s a he
and you’re a she.
The roll call starts at upper right
(wisdoms matter, pulled or not).
A mouthful equals thirty-two.
The tricky part is this:
uppers count from right to left,
lowers, left to right.
You’ll find it’s worth a little work
to show your dentist
that you’re bright.
Elaine Greene Weisburg spent about twenty years each at House & Garden (Conde Nast) and House Beautiful (Hearst) as design reporter and features editor, eventually editing a memoir column and two memoir anthologies.
Archivist Needed
by Elaine Weisburg
Half the drawers I open cue a memory,
memories mixed with paper trash–
sorting through them takes me hours.
Here’s a card that came with flowers
“Thanks for LI lovely years
…and a few more.”
Right as usual, the years too few.
Q and A for college Willy
“When should we wake you?
What about breakfast?”
“Ten o’clock. Eggs Benedict, Bellinis.”
A guest list for the party
when our Henry made partner.
Twenty-nine friends, four of them lawyers,
of counsel now in the afterworld.
Which of my descendants
will search through these scraps
and box up my biography?
Elaine Greene Weisburg spent about twenty years each at House & Garden (Conde Nast) and House Beautiful (Hearst) as design reporter and features editor, eventually editing a memoir column and two memoir anthologies.
Self-portrait
by Charles Troob
I love solitude; I hate to be alone.
Give me a book, a chair, a view of a garden,
half a dozen people wandering through the house,
cheerfully burbling–
and maybe someone will come by with a cold drink
or a little snack and a conspiratorial smile.
Then I’ll say “thanks,” or I hope I will, if I’m not
lost in thought, and after a while I’ll get up
and be gracious, unless people
have already left, in which case
I’ll feel a bit abashed,
but not for long,
A group of IRP members meets with Sarah White each Wednesday morning to learn from the work of published poets and from each other. What a gift!
Heirloom
by Charles Troob
A round silver box
found in London
finely embossed
the lid a Persian miniature
lion ox house tree
an elaborate flowery band
on the circumference–
and only ten pounds!
Small delicate
perfect for Mother
how grown up I felt
bearing a treasure
The true treasure–
uncomplicated love–
lives on in silver
lion ox house tree
slightly tarnished
Chinese not Persian
(what did I know?)
light but weighty
A group of IRP members meets with Sarah White each Wednesday morning to learn from the work of published poets and from each other. What a gift!
Whatever
by Charles Troob
I wanted us to stop and enjoy
the view over the hill,
but you gripped the wheel,
barreled onward,
said next time, maybe, okay?
Okay, sure, whatever.
My body will stay in the car,
smiling and shrugging.
My head will take the next left,
racing through the pass into a new valley
where the air is fresher.
Whatever happens,
as we arrive together
you can count on me
not to be there.
A group of IRP members meets with Sarah White each Wednesday morning to learn from the work of published poets and from each other. What a gift!
Threading the Night
by Mary R. Smith
I dream him
taking the hillside
buoyed by light
I’m dazed as he lifts
his face toward me
his cap tilting.
I shadow him
into his shed:
roof of russet voile
drapes, twists
on upright poles.
He tucks his tunic
under his thighs.
In his lap, on a
a silk bound board
leopards slouch,
gazelles vault,
lacing warp and woof.
Air rouses his fingers,
threads stir
release melodies
lost in the gauze.
Mary Smith enjoys writing poetry as a hobby. Learning to write has been a life-long pleasure.
Access Something Buried
by Mary R. Smith
Leaf through a life of jotted hours,
root around in a nest of notebooks
in the bottom drawer, pages yellow,
memory left to its own devices: Hollyhocks hid garbage cans along the alley.
A card found in my husband’s belongings, Grand Turkmen Hotel, Ashgabat.
A toddler rocks in the hammock,
an owl whoo whoos in the forest, .. I want to go see Mama.
For sixty years the family place
on Puget Sound, It sold today, the water and the trees ………………………………………………………..abide.
Return to Nigeria,
Igbo Celebration of Parents………...Theresa arranges for killing two cows for ……………………………………………………….the feast.
Innocent salutes the kindred assembled to …………………………………………..………….petition him for favors.
Lalibella, Ethiopia, Coptic churches
hewn from stone, .Priests swing censors in pre-dawn mist as ………………………………………………………penitents gather.
Bruno cries when he hears music, My heart trembles so loud.
Hidden, stuck between two legal pads,
a Story Corps recording; my daughter
interviewed her dad a month before he died.
I haven’t listened.
Mary Smith enjoys writing poetry as a hobby. Learning to write has been a life-long pleasure.