RWB Workshop Poem of the Week – Jan 24

Red Wheelbarrow Poets
Poem of the Week 1/24/2017

Arthur Russell

The Third River In the Rain

I love the rain when the rain fills the river,
when the rain fills the river, and the river starts to run,
and the willow branches read the braille of raindrops on the surface,
and ducks, defying type, hide underneath the roadway bridge,
and silent geese glide slantwise to their landing on the river,
and the island in the river sits down lower in the water,
and the tree roots hold the riverbanks,
and the empty branches lift the lowered sky
whose thickened clouds glow weirdly in the nearby city lights.

I love the rain when the rain fills the river,
and the river swells with meaning, and its meaning is to run
past the dam at Kingsland Manor, past the strip mall
on the highway that was once a marsh,
but now has a Chipotle, and the river that would fill that marsh
runs black behind the cars that park for dinner,
in a concrete quarantine that drains the rain that falls on Garret Mountain
through Essex towns and golf courses
to broaden where it joins the fouled Passaic.

I love the rain when I walk beside the river,
when I walk beside the river on my way home from the city,
from the bus stop on the highway, on a pathway
through the darkened park, my raincoat soaked,
my wide-brimmed hat with raindrops dripping from the brim,
whose felt I smell, whose smell I feel, whose beaver eaves
I walk beneath like the ducks beneath the roadway bridge
who see me walking past them to my house a few blocks further,
a man between his job and home, a home between its innocence

and what is yet to come.

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RWB Workshop Poem of the Week – Jan 17

Red Wheelbarrow Poets
Poem of the Week 1/17/2017

Janet Kolstein

Can It Be the Weekend, Again?

The trash-filled rush to question
my pedestrian
escape plan
mocked the force of life’s
bite wounds.

Am I tough enough for the marathon?

Each narrative in my head has a terminal
with a thousand disappointments pulling in,
and phrases, winking with praises,
pulling out.

A full-length masterpiece seems more fictional,
than not,
and a vanishing point puts perspective
in storytelling
that goes above and beyond arithmetic.

Now, each day I wake to a lot of pressure
to flip the hourglass by my bed.

There is no substitute for an amulet
to deceive yourself.

In the waiting booth
with two black suitcases
smelling of cough syrup and bleach,
I search for safety
when my face gets hot —

high tech, low voltage,
visible light heavier than helium —
something, anything,
to fill the spectered lot.

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RWB Workshop Poem of the Week – Jan 10

Red Wheelbarrow Poets
Poem of the Week 1/10/2017

Mark Fogarty

My Younger/Older Sister

My sister was two years younger than I, but she was also older, wiser, smarter, tougher.

She was determined, always. When her college roommate died of cancer, she said, “I’ll live for her.”

She battled depression as I did but hers was worse. She nearly died of it after she gave up her baby and found it impossible to turn off that new love the way the doctors could turn off her milk. But she got up, went on, kicked the thing in the teeth until it walked away as all bullies do. In Alaska she found medicine that kept it away for many years.

She traveled to the wildest places on earth, jumped into the cold North Pacific (survival time, about one minute), found a cache of mummified human remains, tried to sleep where the sun shone all 24 hours, visited prisoners to encourage them to get their lives back on track. She walked into Native villages and astounded the people there by not telling them what to do, like all the other white people who came. They ended by inviting her to their weddings.

After seeing the lousy health care those people had, she told me, even though she was turning 40, “I’m going to become a doctor.”

She hated guns, and had a job where she had to carry one in case of bears. She never took it out of her pack, instead made a deal with the bears, that she wouldn’t bother them if they wouldn’t bother her. “And they never have,” she said. I have asked for the same deal.

She was perpetually thoughtful. She asked my forgiveness for things I didn’t hold against her. When she said “I’ll pray for you,” I believed in those prayers, was willing to conceive there might be somebody to pray to.

She was special, but she longed for the ordinary. “I want to have the same things other people have,” she said. A family, a partner. She lived in a place where men far outnumbered women. The problem was, she told me, “The odds are good but the goods are odd.”

When I visited her in Alaska, she said, “Don’t I have a beautiful place to live?” And it was, a place of rock cathedrals, a sleeping woman who lies on her side along the tops of mountains, a place with the tiniest Arctic roses whose colors were as dense as the black in black holes. We both took Dramamine before the ride on the ocean, where we saw a golden eagle by the shore, an ice sheet filled by otters, barking sea lions, diving sea birds, orcas that dove under our boat, a calving glacier.

“You should always smile in pictures,” she said, “because that’s the way people will remember you.” And I do remember her smiling, standing next to people beaming to be in her presence.

She had a talent for friendship. She had ten funerals, more or less. A Yu’pik group sang to release her soul, to go with the moon, the borealis. That was the best one.

She did things to show she wasn’t afraid. She went scuba diving off Indonesia. She signed up for a class in mountain climbing. But she wasn’t frightened of much. Looking at the glacier ice cascading into the cold water she told me, “The only thing I’m scared of is ice.”

She died after someone she was roped to slipped on a patch of ice.

She visits me in dreams, and I never remember she’s dead. Once we made spaghetti together, but she didn’t stay for the meal. Once she showed me how to find the black pearls hidden in the dark sand of a cold Alaska beach. And once she was sitting under a tree, like Buddha, like Gandhi, eyes closed. She was going to sit there as long as it took, even a thousand years, to figure it out.

I’d live for her if I had a clue. Maybe I will smile in pictures, but I haven’t yet. I want to have the same things other people have. I want to believe God has his eye on the ordinary.

I remember her, of course, around the holidays. When I was maybe seven and she was five, she broke it to me that there is no Santa Claus.

Thanksgiving, 2016

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RWB Workshop Poem of the Week – Dec 27

Red Wheelbarrow Poets
Poem of the Week 12/27/2016

Arthur Russell

Spit

I

In Jay Meek’s “Walls,” about the imprisoned
poet Chidiock Tichborne, stone and despair
keep close company. Meek says Tichborne
wrote his testament on the wall of his cell,
and laid his head on a cobble to die.

Today, more than half
a million American men live
in solitary confinement, and lacking Tichborne’s
mind, and Jay Meek’s suffrage, they suffer
without landmarks.

They and their jailors are mirrors in despair.
He who minds the forgotten is forgotten himself.

Large prison populations are a luxury item
for an impatient, wealthy society,
purchased like a millionaire
disposing of an automobile
because the tire has gone flat.

II

The singular Tichborne becomes a generation
of young, American men in putty life,
and jailors, whose key rings
shut whole quadrants of their living brains,
twenty-three hours of dark,
seven days of solitude,
fifty-two weeks of disappointment,
365 ankle-chained skeletons in a row
like dried leaves in the sophist wind,
like coked-up crabs crossing brown, deserted paths
to egg-crates inside prisons, dying.

III

Chidiock Tichborne was disemboweled
before he was hanged (something ISIS
never seems to do on YouTube)
and the first Queen Elizabeth, when she
found out, banned the practice,
or we Americans might still be doing it today.

Today, we say that making a man watch
his mind drip like a blood sample
into a velvety vinyl bag
advances the public good.

IV

Tichborne was a busker
when he stuffed his sonnets sideways
in a vase that once held tulips
shipped in by boat from Holland,
and he fried an egg by skillet
and tossed two scallions in it,
and the hotel smelled like beeswax,
as the family below him

lit the candles they had carried
from the homeland they had left in the Levant.

They say he had a mistress,
but it never was that simple.
She would bring him ends of sausage
left over by at the café,
and lick her teeth and watch him
eating slowly at the window
as the crows fought on the cobbles
on the street that she had come from,

over something that no longer looked
like anything a crow would want to eat.

And sometimes they had passion,
and sometimes they had nothing,
but the time they sat there passing,
till she stood and took her handbag
from the chair back at the table
where his work, like shoveled dirt
on sidewalks, lay unwanted,
one rhyme short of making good.

As she went back down the stairway,
she heard children laugh in Hebrew,

and she didn’t really want to,
still, she looked back at the window
when she reached the intersection
at the passage to the subway,
but he wasn’t at the window,
and the light had changed to yellow in the sky.

He’d gone back to the table,
spit on his hands and rubbed them,
whittled down his pencil,
listed words that rhymed with ‘orange,’
made a box around ‘syringe,’
then lost twenty minutes thinking
of the friend who’d died of drugs.

His beard grew while he sat there.

Tichborne was a Catholic; though
he didn’t take the sacrament,
he liked to make confession,
and talk to mourning women,
so he went down to St. Peters,
and sat in Francis’s niche,
and a man who he’d seen before
sat beside him in the twilight,

and said the time had come to
assassinate Elizabeth;

and so, at only twenty-eight,
his stupid, thumping heart
insisted on the impossible
continuation of his life,
while his mind played opposites,
and the rhymes came quickly;
“frost of cares” rhymed “field of tares”
“death” with “womb” rhymed “earth” with “tomb.”

“My glasse is full,” he wrote,
“and now my glasse is runne,
“And now I live, and now my life is done.”

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RWB Workshop Poem of the Week – Dec 20

Red Wheelbarrow Poets
Poem of the Week 12/20/2016

Mark F. Fogarty

Sodom or Gomorrah?

Which was it, Sodom or Gomorrah?
The seaside town where the bodies washed up?
That was Sodom, I believe.

The city where the hospitals were bombed
To cure stubborn life by death?
That was Gomorrah, perhaps.

The city where the children’s birthday cake
Ran mud and blood down their stunned faces?
That was Armageddon, certainly.

The city where hope was beheaded
And babies raped before murder?
That city must rule hell.

Who looked on horrified, pretending to be blind,
When asked to take some in?

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RWB Workshop Poem of the Week – Dec 13

Red Wheelbarrow Poets
Poem of the Week 12/13/2016

Mark Fogarty

Short Light

I went driving this afternoon in the short light,
The short fading light a week short of the equinox.

I came back after twenty years away
To the town where I grew up,
Tied in knots after leaving my spouse.
It was soothing to me, familiar,
Down to the ghosts that walk the streets
And the unchanged bricks of my high school,
Rocks that once were igneous, now sedimentary.

There’s a looseness to the late light, a clarity.
And I have lived long enough to remember dangerous things.
There are the homes they built on top of an old chemical plant,
The basements ready to burst with acid poltergeists.
And the building where I worked on the local paper,
Where a doctor now cracks bones.
Back then we worked in the basement and could clearly hear
The heavy footsteps from the ghost upstairs where nobody was.
And I was in love with a girl I worked with,
Stupid love, tormenting, worse than colitis.
When she married someone else I took a vow,
Scarlett O’Hara to the barren fields,
That I’d never be jealous again.

And the neglected arts center
Where my poets now meet in the kindergarten room
For the babies of the resident spiritualists.
In the old days it was a movie theater with a chandelier
Whose fat crossbeams were shrugged in cheesecloth,
Haunted by a ghost that turned out to be a cat
Wandered in to the unused back rooms to get out of the cold.
I have a memory of butter melting for the popcorn,
No heat necessary but the hormones of the candy girl
Who thrust her soft belly against my pants to feel what I had.
One night after work she did a striptease
On the old stage above the orchestra pit,
Ended wearing only an usher’s suit jacket and white panties.

That’s the way to do it. Keep them wanting more.
Keep us wanting to hear the orchestra that played the vaudeville bits,
The Marx Brothers there and gone in a flash, too quick to see.
They played there, I’m told, in 1922.
“They called the place the Ravioli,” said Groucho,
“But all I wanted was a decent knish.”

The poet the place is named after would have liked the striptease.
He was still alive when my family moved here. A few days before he died,
He walked the half a block to the library to return his books.
My mother knew him, asked how he was feeling.
“Not very well,” he said.
A tidy life is when you remember to return your library books.

I knew his Catholic bells, I went to school right under them.
But the nuns wouldn’t teach his heathenish stuff.

I worked in the other library, at the university.
If my student came in, I’d let her run for the magazines,
Sit with my feet up, reading the New York Review and Paris Match.
They sold the college to the nuns, who told us
We could believe we were descended from monkeys if we wanted to.

My library is now called an Education Commons.
I doubt they have magazines there now,
No thrilling starlets with their vibrant French tits.

I used to sit in the park by the river, waiting for a body to float by.
One time someone cut up his wife and dropped the bits in the river,
But I never saw anything more than a few icebergs of old tires.
One time my best friend jumped into the river at night,
The police searching for him and his insane buddy,
With the light from their flashlights unspooling on the water.

Good thing we’re below the falls.

Keep wanting more, and maybe you’ll see, as I saw,
A kid dressed up as Gandhi, down to the miniature walking stick.
That was at the Presbyterian church,
At the intersection of Main Street and a postcard from New England.
The father, the son and the mahatma, a good mix.

I used to think this place was a leafy locked room.

Now in the falling light, I listen
For the honk of the firetruck.
I want to hear the coming of the fireman Santa
Who throws candy canes to the equinox.

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New Book: The Red Wheelbarrow Poem of the Week 2016

The Red Wheelbarrow Poets Poetry Workshop has been producing top-rate poetry at various locations in Rutherford, NJ for the last ten years. The book represents the work of poets both local and cosmopolitan. The poems can be free verse, confessional, formal, even haiku and sonnets, but one thing they share in common is that they pay close attention to the dictum of famed Rutherford poet William Carlos Williams: Look for the live language. You’ll find it in the work of JOHN BARRALE, MILTON EHRLICH, MARK FOGARTY, RICHARD GREENE, CLAUDIA SEREA, ZORIDA MOHAMMED, ANTON YAKOVLEV, JANET KOLSTEIN, WAYNE L. MILLER and BOB MURKEN.

Order at http://www.lulu.com/shop/red-wheelbarrow-poets/the-red-wheelbarrow-poem-of-the-week-2016/paperback/product-22974471.html.

RWB Workshop Poem of the Week – Nov 29

Red Wheelbarrow Poets
Poem of the Week 11/29/2016

Arthur Russell

She Snores

On our bed lies the woman whose flesh
tackled me by the ankles.

I fell for years, slowly,
and lay, eyes open, unable to speak,
staring down the side street
that leads to the riverfront,
red rust blooming
on my white amalgam shins.

She snores, and I listen
like a mason at the stone yard
to the sound of her gravel sliding
off the truck, and I know by
its timbre if it’s pea
or quarter inch.

She grinds her teeth.
She curls in a pangolin ball
when I frighten her.

She plays the piano, though not for me.

We talk a lot while we watch tv.

Her people say “I love you”
instead of “goodbye.” Mine say “goodbye”
instead of “I love you.”

Fish, laid on ice, hug one another.
I wait outside her yurt, reading signs
in the blowing which-way snow.

She sleeps. I listen to her breathe.
It’s the time we get along best.

She extends my probation
year by year while she gathers
the evidence she evidently needs.

She used to talk to Julie, her childhood
German Shepherd, in her sleep.

I listened to the song in her voice
as she reasoned with the dog.

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RWB Workshop Poem of the Week – Nov 15

Red Wheelbarrow Poets
Poem of the Week 11/15/2016

Arthur Russell

The Jetty

I stood on the canted, wet black stones
piled outward from Brighton Beach into Rockaway Inlet,
with coffee and a cigarette, the taste of which was ruined by the cold salt air.
I went back to that place, as if looking for my keys,
if keys were the self who still had a say.

Behind me, the six-story shtetl of bricks and heavy
Jewish food backed up to the elevated subway,
spine of the old neighborhood, escape route bending northward
over Mrs. Stahl’s Knishes, towards Manhattan.

Before me, the ocean Grandma Eva called the yam
and urged me go swim, churned and threw up lattices
of spume in the name of the blistered sea.

My hoodie zipped, I cuffed the drips-in-winter nose
I inherited from my father, and, stiff-eyed, took the wind
from Breezy Point, past which I’d sailed once, far as Ambrose Lightship
to see the ocean open out and offer no more answers until England.

At 17, in khakis that matched my desire to run away,
I swabbed locker rooms, and mowed the scruffy lawn
where white and red impatiens were planted
in the shape of the burgee of the yacht club in Sheepshead Bay
where I tendered the members to their sailboats at the moorings.

And evenings, when they’d all gone home, on my last run
over the summer black and glassy bay, I smoked cigarettes
and listened to “My Love” on a cream-colored transistor radio
with a gold-tone grill and the name Electra etched in red script
beside the thumb wheel for the volume.

And on race days, some of which were cirrus and zenith
blue for absolution, I winched the lightening boats
up from their trailers, swung them on a davit over the cyclone fence
where gangway sailors held steering lines to keep them from swinging
while we lowered them down,

and I followed them in the committee boat, past Kingsborough College
and the seaside nursing home where forty years later my father would die,

dropped anchor in the inlet, and fired blanks from a cannon to start the race that sent them
— a regatta of schoolteachers, doctors and tradesmen, and a gal with short hair
who climbed telephone poles for Bell Atlantic on weekdays and the masts of sailboats
in a bosun’s chair on Sunday —

around a course of red and black channel markers, buoys and bells,
their boats heeling over to beat up to the wind, or raising
their painted spinnakers like pregnant women promenading
in summer dresses, though none of this could reach me
in the wretched unhappiness in which, those days, I bobbed,
and waited for the race to end.

And then, as a man of thirty-three, when I’d scuttled my first chance at poetry,
after 5 years working with a damp towel slung over my shoulder
and my arms crossed on my chest to hold the anger in,
as the exit manager of the Hollywood Car Wash on Coney Island Avenue,
speaking college French with the Haitians who wiped the cars,
and leaving there for law school, living still in Brighton,

I stood on these same rocks, reciting mnemonic devices
to drill jurisprudence as I prepared for the bar exam, the summer
I also came closest to dunking a basketball in the playground
at Brightwater Court.

And now, in the shadow of that dray career,
with hips as brittle as butter chip cookies,
I climb these February rocks to stare at the sea and back at the beach
and the boardwalk, and the men’s room under the boardwalk
where a boy once showed me his penis,

and wonder where I fucked up, how I got it so wrong, how the key
I turned to open the world had locked me instead into absurd anxiety
and obdurate complacency.

I cut my feet on a broken bottle here.
I ran with my sister to catch the orange drink man.
I came for the fireworks on Tuesdays
and found my grandparents laughing with neighbors
in folding chairs when they were my age now.

I brought girls to my apartment in my red Monte Carlo.
I bought sturgeon from the fish store. I lived across from the synagogue
where you could hear the men mumble through the open windows
on Yom Kippur while the women waited outside wondering
how long after sunset the rabbi would hold them;

The swells on the ocean are the muscles of the Earth,
and the spines of the fish-eaten fish fall through the sea
to what we call its bed to pretend that it sleeps.

But the business of the waves proceeds
without regard for whom, or when
because the ocean is a vast, tectonic, sloshing thing
that answers to planets, not men.

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RWB Workshop Poem of the Week – Nov 8

Red Wheelbarrow Poets
Poem of the Week 11/08/2016

Milton Ehrlich

If Only My Name Had Been Nicholas

I wouldn’t have been such a scared kid.
If my name had been something — anything,
just not Milton, an alien name,
a yellow star of David.

How could it not catch the eye of those toothless oafs
who hoisted me up in the air in 1936?
My 6-year-old legs fluttered in the air,
wordless — when they demanded
to know: “Are you a Jew?”

My bruised mouth stuttered to utter: “I’m a Greek,”
hoping against hope
I could pass for Christian,
and maybe Greek.

They wore swastika armbands,
forced me to salute Hitler
with a shout of Sieg Heil!

Father wanted to call me Nicholas,
but Mother preferred Mordecai,
after her beloved grandfather.

I could have been a tough kid
with a name like Nick,
maybe even, Nick the Prick.

And might have become a pal
of Tony, Frankie and Luigi,
instead of hanging out
with Hebrew School classmates,
Marvin, Norman and Howard.

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