2005 Literary Events

Festival July 30th at the Boulder Library featuring Veronica Patterson and Tim Hernandez, a poetry slam, a bookfair, and more....

Veronica Patterson's poems:

Margaret | Around the Block of the World | Blue on My Mother’s Hands | Clown of Light | Room | Unreasonable Shoes

 



Margaret



Margaret is a field.

In the field goldenrod thickens. Weeds grow so tall

            that by August you can't see.

Margaret is a path through the field and she is where

            the path disappears.

Margaret is the house with the red door and the room

            with the maroon floor where four children sleep a troubled sleep.

            When they wake, she sends them outside and they raise a calf,

            a collie, each other.

Margaret smokes so she can see each sigh. She smokes constantly.

            The ashtrays overflow. Later, as therapy, she will make ashtrays.

Margaret is a dream Margaret once had. Margaret drinks toward the dream

            she can’t quite forget and doesn't dare remember. She wakes

            to choose sleep.

She is a wrong turn Margaret took or several turns; she is bad about directions.

Margaret is not a door that opens nor cruelty nor a bed nor forgiveness,

            but she can be forgiven.

I repeat, Margaret is a field and a path through the field and the point

            where the path disappears. She will not come to find you.

Because she will not come to find you, you start out deep

            in this gold and weedy field.



                                                        Colorado-North Review

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Around the Block of the World

I

A story is being told to hold off pain,

the listener thin, pale, a slight smile


on her lips. The story could be

about anything broken: a wall in a certain city,


the day you came home from the hospital

to this street, to all the years we walked


around and around the block. It was summer. Or leaves fell

on the children who had followed us. Laughing,


hiding in hedges. As we were saying

something about desire or renunciation


Once when I asked if there were anything else

I could do, you said, “Can you heal me?”


II

This isn’t, whatever you think, a cousin of pity.

It is a happiness or resembles one we often had


words in our air we taste them suspicious of pleasure

then finding it


Finches in the garden thistle lovers now the cosmos

is tall the light is moving


and stippled, cautious coming to you with its shadows.

Outside, now, something flashes. Your new cane holding sun? A leaf?


A message? As we walk, you tell me something to tell him,

after you“But not right away.”





III

All afternoon clouds pile toward,

but then move past. Your eyes grow


larger. Later, a dream wakes me with the words

bear your form I’m trying


to find something to close off, shut out,

something to balance the landscape opening


in your eyes, but despise means

not to look at and it’s too late.


I look and look. I keep, though I don’t know what¾

watch? time? Last night, in sleep,


I walled you in a garden, but you said

“I can’t see you,” so I cut a window.


You wanted a door. “I don’t know,” I said. You said,

“I want to be in the world.”


“It’s so expensive,” I said, as we walked slowly

around one block of it. You agree, “So dear.”

 

 

 

 

 


 

 




Blue on My Mother’s Hands


The last time I saw her

she wore a star sapphire

intense against

the tan

of her fingers.


How easily her skin

darkened

on the way to California

one summer or

was some of it nicotine? Her hands


holding a cigarette, deft,

in ceremonies of tap, light, flick—

from the center of the world

she blew smoke rings

within rings. Her hands


steady on dispatch phones,

she sent sirens to what was still

in progress—or in silence

to what lay

beneath the bridge


even as what

happened inside her

grew as sure

as any such leap.


Even if her hands,

her lovely hands, shook

near the end, surely

veins still fell like rain-fed rivers blue


on my mother’s

breasts—no, in her face—no, I was

speaking of

her hands.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Clown of Light


“What I wanted to do was to paint sunlight on the side of a house.”

                                                                      Edward Hopper


            When Edward Hopper said cupola, he meant light. When Hopper said wind, he meant light moving. that great principle of undulation in nature

            When he said people, he meant “human figure” or “distance.”

            House meant opportunities for light. Rooms furnished with interior angles, each room a mansion.

            When he said drug-store window, Ex-Lax, he meant America after dark. When he said Nighthawks, he meant solitary foragers, residual loneliness, insomnia. When he said hotel lobby, he meant where light stays.

            When he said Sheridan Theater, he meant unities of light.

            The wood catboat he built turned into the wind. So he planed light. Not he . . . who can alter matter, but he who can alter my state of mind. Every building said, Edward Hopper, Proprietor.

            Jo in Wyoming meant roadside light. Clouds meant interruptions. He painted her painting.

            When he said reclining nude, he meant flesh luminous and diagonal.

            Brick (texture and weight of light); water (light moiré); trees (pattern and fling of light). There is no trifle.

            Sidewalks circled the block again and again past his (other) work. Doors were openings for light.

             this day he has seen something truly

            When he said morning sun, it was direct address. When he said 7 a.m., he meant and again light. When he said 11 a.m., he meant bright sills.

            When he said second story sunlight, he meant Genesis (no light before Thee). Young woman leaning. Very little yellow pigment. the days are gods

            When he said automat, he meant light waiting on a woman, one glove off, fruit.

            When he said summertime, he meant cloth of light, architecture of thigh. When he said South Carolina morning, he meant light’s home or desire for light with one large red breast. He is the world’s eye. He is the world’s heart.

            Hypotheses of light: street, elbow, mansard roof, arm, from here, curb, edge, longing, tunnel, lace, room (often room), tablecloth, window, nose, never candle the circuit of things through forms

            When he said “soir bleu,” he meant clown of light with cigarette, “fool for light.”

            In all this, the paint was thinking. I am nothing. I see all.


 

                                                                      —one story recounts that when urged to read Walt Whitman, Hopper read Ralph Waldo Emerson instead.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




Room



I don’t know why I was awake at the window. The sky cleared and the moon glittered on two feet of new snow. They came into view, my father carrying my mother, or, to intrude in my own telling, who else would it have been? I say that because they seemed unfamiliar, figures in some other story. The car was surely off the road. She lay in his arms, laughing, one foot in a sparkling sandal, the other bare. He might have been laughing too, though of course I couldn’t hear them with the window closed. I wanted to wake my older sister, but she was sleeping in her own tale. I wanted to throw open the window and call them back into my life, interrupt their solitude, which seemed prior. Every house is made of stories, and perhaps every story of houses. Like this one, where (or in which) I watched from the window on New Year’s Eve in Ithaca. When I was in high school, I would have insisted that my mother drank too much that night. Ten years later, I saw how beautiful she still was, and believed my father’s story, told after she died, about the first time he saw her walk down the steps on Falstaff Road, in a white muslin summer dress (though once he might have said it was white piqué), and he thought, my chemist father, She’s the one, not knowing yet she was engaged to someone else, who was sick that night, and so they danced. As he carried her through the snow, he slid, they dipped, her head back, throat silvered, the last waltz of the night, the band packing up. Now, I think of the sparkling sandal in the snow, see that my own cells might have multiplied exuberantly, to a beat. Like truth, radiance moves around in a story, lighting up this or that.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Unreasonable Shoes


                            for my father 


He could never have worn them in New York

in January where snow fell as white, sometimes

three feet overnight or ice japanned the trees. Spring

brought mud to waiting janitors. Summers, maybe

 

summers, but starting in late August, each rain fell

degrees chillier and more horizontal until it caused

November. These were California shoes,

designed for leisure and perfectibility, mistaken ideas


about sun and ocean, leather mimicking sea foam.

In fact, they were late California shoes, to be worn

with a shirt from Mexico, a bargain, white

embroidery on white, though the only wedding

 

was fabric to damp skin as he climbed the steep garden

that rose from the patio hung with paper lanterns

to pause behind dark, glossy leaves, a green shield

that repelled his second wife’s plaintive voice, to feel


the small country inside him, the guerilla warfare

that divided it: in the north, the gray district, secret police;

in the south, tourists and commerce¾he hadn’t chosen

either, had he? Now, in the indigo dusk,


deep-throated scarlet blossoms—what were

their names? His only botany was chemical—glowed

far above ground cover that almost hid his shoes.

It is the nature of reason to see


to the end; it is the nature of desire

not to. Here my unseasonal love enters,

wanting to ask its unreasonable questions:


Where is my father and in what shoes?

In the gloom, the shoes, white shoes, the shoes,

or am I repeating the wrong word?

 


              Honorable mention, Tor House contest 2004, currently on the Tor House Web site

 

 

 


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