Saturday, April 25, 2015

The Woman and the Cunning Rabbit


This is the second of two Liberian folk tales I found among my mother's papers. It was translated from the Vai by Vaani Gray.

Once there were a woman and her husband. They were living by a big wide rock. They had one daughter. The girl was the most beautiful of all creation. In that country human beings and beasts of the forest inter-married.

As this girl grew to womanhood, many persons brought dowry for her. Those beasts that were rich would sometimes bring a good sum of money, domestic animals and many dresses. Whenever they brought these things to the girl's mother she would say, "I do not want any of these things for my daughter. If any person wants to marry my child he must build a hut on this big rock. When the hut is completely built, then he may take his wife with him."

All the people in the country came to try their chance. They could not build the hut. All the strong animals, baboon, chimpanzee, elephant, lion, all tried, but could not build the hut.

At last Cunning Rabbit came. The woman showed him the surface of the big rock where he had to build the hut. Before Rabbit could do anything, he built a fence across the little creek at the side of the big rock. Then he went to look for sticks. He spent the whole day in the bush, and at evening he brought a tiny small stick. He went to look in his fence for fish. He caught two small fishes and one big crab. He threw the fishes back into the creek and carried the crab to the woman and said, "Please, my mother, cook my crab for me. I want pepper soup."

The woman agreed. Rabbit went back to his work. Not very long after, the woman called him to his soup. Rabbit came. He drank a little bit of the soup, and then took one limb of the crab and bit it. Then he shouted, "Oh, mother! the crab is not properly cooked and you set it before me to eat. Please cook it again."

And the woman boiled the crab and boiled it and boiled it. Then she called Cunning Rabbit. He came, and took one of the limbs again, and as soon as he set his teeth on it he pulled it from his mouth as quickly as he could. Then he said to the woman, "The crab is not done at all. As soon as one tries to bite it, it wants to break one's teeth out of one's mouth."

Then the woman answered and said, "Whomever have you seen in this world that could cook crab as soft as fish?"

Then Cunning Rabbit also answered and said, "Now you have decided in favor of the impossibility of building a hut on a big stone like this. Wherever have you seen a man building on a big rock like this before?"

It was upon this point that the woman gave her daughter to Cunning Rabbit to be his wife.

"When a rascal dies, a rascal buries him." As the Frenchman would say, "To a rascal, a rascal and a half."

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Untitled 4/23/15


She died;
and at the viewing the backs of his hands
showed that bruising that is purely age as he declared
that there was no one else for him.
I thought he might not know us,
but mine, good heart, invited him to supper.
Yesterday I met him on his lawn
where he walked with careful steps among the beds,
asked after my daughters,
and scattered white fertilizer beads among his flowers,
envy of the neighborhood.

April 23 2015

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

The Spider and the Firefly


This is a folktale from Liberia, translated from the Vai language by a family friend, Vaani Gray. My family lived in Liberia during the 1950s, and my mother became deeply involved in the study of Vai. I recently found this story and one other among her papers.

Long, long ago, there was a great famine. Food matter was a real problem all over the world. Leopard decided to build a fence across the water to catch fish. Now it was from this fence that Spider and Firefly used to steal fish every night. Whenever it was time for them to go, Firefly would give light in order that they might not miss the way.

Leopard was confused. Every morning when he came to the fence he found fish scales on the bank. But when he looked in the fence he could see nothing.

One evening Spider and Firefly came and stole some fish from the fence. Then they started dividing the fish. Spider took all the big fish and gave all the small ones to Firefly. He did this all the time, cheating Firefly. Now Firefly was fed up, and planned how he could pay Spider back. He said, "I will pay Spider for what he is doing."

When they went to the fence the next night they caught plenty fish as usual. Spider did the same trick, swindling Firefly. They tied up their kinjas and started home. As they were nearing the place where the road branched out to Leopard's, Firefly put out the light. Spider missed his way and took the path to Leopard's in the very dark night. Soon he reached Leopard's house. He went right up and knocked on the door. He thought it was his house. He called to his wife and said, "Ngekuchu, Ngekuchu, open the door."

Leopard got up gently and opened the door. Spider entered and threw down the kinja of fish. Leopard was lying on the bed and he covered himself. Spider thought Leopard was his wife. As he touched him a little, Leopard sprang up and took hold of Spider's hands and said, "Spider, you have been going to my fence and stealing my fish. It is God that hands you over to me. I will kill you."

And Spider said, "My uncle, I did not go to steal fish from your fence. I do not want you to have the trouble of going to the fence every morning. Therefore I went and brought your fish to you."

Leopard said, "All right, wait until tomorrow."

Morning broke, but they never saw Spider again.

Monday, April 13, 2015

Dogtown


Dogtown,
and the surfers are out,
awaiting inferior waves.
Up the beach an assembly
in summer colors mixed with winter black is plunging
for a late Saint Patrick's Day:
Those screams are not the wind.
His long leash makes the sound of pigeons cooing
because the wind is so strong that it thrums.
It really isn't warm enough for this jacket,
but we're rushing spring, taking it on and over,
and Hell's payment is for now
just the last of the rotten snow.

April 13 2015

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Narrators and Stories


"Have you never considered how strange, how hard a thing it is for a narrator to outlive his story? The incidents it was his sole purpose to record, all finished; the actors all gone, doing other things, or dead; all the apostrophes and periods in place; even the book itself, perhaps, neatly on a shelf--what then? 'Move on,' his friends may say. Well; but to what? What else can equal? And more: Can he ever feel himself the equal of what he was before, when he was in the story?"

Conversations with Myself, by Michael Kei Stewart

April 8 2015

Monday, March 30, 2015

Dripping


I am in love with melting,
enamored of thaw,
and besotted with storm drains that sound
like toilets endlessly running.
No matter how cruel, I long to see
the ancient snow undone,
the gutters rinsed by rills and rivulets,
and the slow creep of a quiet seep
across the market parking lot.
Dripping is the Spring.

March 30 2014

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Ruination


A ruined world's all right to start with.
You can build with trash, you know?
Or on it, anyway,
and under all that wreckage
there may still be seeds that grow.

March 26 2015

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Winter Locks


Winter locks up more than water, locks
people behind their doors,
locks laughter in your throat,
locks boats to shore.
Locks patience, leisure;
more:
locks eyes on frozen paths for pitfalls,
locks hearts on getting by,
and locks outside the sweetness that we seek,
the rest, the ease, the open space
where hearts can sing and minds can speak
the Spring.

March 18 2015

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Not Seeking


The solution lies in not seeking it.
How many times must I be told?
As often as the day tells me otherwise.
It is an empty toll, a clangor of nothing,
but, oh, how it promises,
and oh, how loud.
I  can almost not hear
the silence underlying.

March 15 2015

Thursday, March 12, 2015

Road Work


This road let go.
A thing of crumbs and fragments:
The frost that heaved it melted so
the cavity beneath lay vacant so
the next damn car could crush it so
goes springtime in New England.

March 12 2015

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Drawing Lesson


Why does the sun have wheels,
I heard him ask. No, she said,
it's a taxi. Wait, I thought,
does she mean Apollo's chariot?
No, of course not; look,
they're just getting their snacks.
But still, I thought,
they might know more than they know.

March 3 2015

Monday, February 16, 2015

Life at Sea


Outside, a dorsal ridge is sounding
a swale beyond the mudroom window.
The swells that swell the yard are white,
not merely capped,
and the tides are astronomical.
Yesterday was a perfect storm, so now
this snow day is so no day
to set sail.

February 16 2015

Thursday, January 29, 2015

No Need to Rest


For my aunt.

She looked up suddenly from her work
to find him standing by her.
How long have you been there,
she asked. Not long, he said.
Well, a while. Can't you take a break?
You've been working hard.
You should rest.
Pshaw, she said, as she rose,
dusting her hands
once, twice,
on her trousers. I don't need to rest
if I'm with you.

January 29 2015

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Silk from the Ceiling


How does a spider know
when
to
stop
dropping?
Is it just that it senses
its silk sacs depleted?
Or does it have the feeling:
I have reached the point
of no return. No choice:
up
back
climb
must
I
and eat my progress on the way.

January 28 2015

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Working At Home II


To find myself almost at home is a warming thing.
Soon I will drop the leash and he will lollop
into the yard to stand,
reading the morning news.
Coffee expects me, and I will not disappoint.
In the pool of halogen light 
we will commune
before the whitening glow 
of our waking master. 

January 24 2015

Friday, January 9, 2015

Returning


I have been on a long journey, he said,
and his accent sounded different.
I considered him odd, and was not sure if he deserved
my pity or my contempt.
I have been away because I had to be,
he continued seriously. There were things
I had to do, demons to struggle with,
conclusions to reach.
And have you reached them, I asked
with utmost kindness and civility. Yes,
he said, yes, I believe I have,
and he showed me his hand,
and shamed me to silence
with the ugliness of his wound.

January 9 2015

Saturday, December 20, 2014

Seaweed


In the push and pull of forces
you can be like seaweed on the tide.
The fascinating dance
in tidepools at the turn,
of flotsam rocked
by something greater nearing,
declares your power to be satisfied
for once
with where you're taken.

December 20 2014

Hanging Lights


I will hang these lights above the porch
and curse the cold
though God knows I should speak more joyfully.
Put aside the question of his birth;
to be here on the earth
with those indoors
is cause enough for constant celebration.

December 20 2014

Friday, December 19, 2014

12 Surprising Ways

 
12 surprising ways 

you may be hastening universal heat death.

Try this one simple trick 
to wipe out existential dread.
5 tips empty commmercialism experts
don't want you to know about. Like our declining 
moral integrity Facebook page. How long can your inmost spirit 
conceal this amazing secret? Are you at risk for 
despair?A brilliant way to pay off your 
karmic debt.Humankind seeks solace in emotional wasteland; 
you won't believe what happens next!the truth about 
unfulfilled yearningwhat noble virtue are you?
I got selflessness7heartbreakingcelebrityconfessionsof
futilitytruthisinforashockingsurprisestopwhatyou'redoing
andwatchthisvideo:

Man loses hope, stranger finds and returns it

and then



December 19 2014

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Repost: Zen Poan


     
       
     

(What is the truth of a poem without words?)

December 14 2014

Friday, December 12, 2014

A Poem Charles Dickens Could Have Written If Only He Had Preferred Free Verse


If I can bear
but a touch of Your hand
here, upon my heart,
I shall be upheld
in all of this.

December 12 2014

Update for Bruce:

If I can bear
but a touch of Your hand
upon my heart,
I shall be upheld
in all of this.

December 19 2014

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Prospective Return


This is a place I could yearn to come back to.
This narrow wasteland
of shattered board on rounded rock,
these sunken channels filled with the last of daylight:
It is nothing but the storm's great draining board,
the place where land gives up the fight,
but in the season others leave behind,
it is his and mine.

November 23 2014

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Working at Home


God strokes the cat-like back
of my crouching house with rain,
while I sit in its lamplit interior
warm, and feeling like a breathing heart.

November 18 2014

Monday, November 10, 2014

Vacationers


They're all talking about going to Florida.
Actually, shouting is more like it;
the whole neighborhood's a racket.
Ostentatious.
Uncalled-for.
Go.
See if I care.

Damn birds.

November 10 2014

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

A First Concert


If only I could tell enough the joy
oh my heart it filled
no spaces left not one because
you sat among the music.

November 4 2014