April 3, 2017 Poem “Cut: Elegy for My Grandfather, Charles Schultz”

NaPoWriMo 2017 April 3

Cut
     Elegy for My Grandfather, Charles Schultz

Though you were ever gentle,
when I was a little girl I was frightened
to be near you. A little deaf in one ear, you
barked and shouted, whirling
with a raised finger, a loud “Hey!

before your smile, your joke.
I didn’t know you were (as you’d say)
tickled pink to have me there.
My visits to Kalamazoo were rare.
Each year or so, we’d go

with you and Grandma, to the Elks
Club where B.P.O.E. was emblazoned
over the door. “Biggest Pigs on Earth!”
you’d always say, with relish. Inside,
Grandma would inspect the tines of forks,

and adjust the drape of her mink
stole, which frightened me with its teeth,
thin and sharp, biting its own tail,
and its glassy eyes reflecting candlelight.
Grandma would carp and you would rail,

sotto voce, then order a round of velvet
Manhattans, a Shirley Temple for me
with three cherries. Sometimes you’d swirl
your drink with your short finger, pink-
domed, the one you’d lost because,

you said, you were a damned fool
not to turn the lawn mower off
before stooping to adjust the wheel.
I’d imagine that cut finger on its bed
of hacked grass. I’d gaze at the pickles,

the dripping ketchup. I’d go white. You’d laugh
and say, Oh, Hell! Hey! Any day
above ground is a good day!
You lived past ninety, held my daughter,
your only great-grandchild.

She doesn’t recall you as rough or mild
or remember you at all. Now, though, I can read
what you chose to blur or cut off from view.
Suffice to say, your father could be tough
and tan your hide no matter what you’d do.

Yet you survived, decided to join
a burly brotherhood, the fraternal Elks,
a new Order. Grandpa, now I can see you in that mirror
behind the bar, flipping a silver coin
in merriment—Protective and Benevolent.

Leslie Schultz

In 2016, I published a collection of elegies that included one for my paternal grandmother (“Green Grapes”) but not one for Grandpa Schultz. This winter, I have finished–well, all but the final polish!–a crown of sonnets for this grandfather’s grandfather, a Civil War veteran. Last week, I dreamed about Grandpa Schultz. In my dream, he was shouting. Last night, I talked about that with my sister–and so, today’s prompt could not have been more timely for me. And, perhaps, for him.  Leslie
Image result for Public domain photos of Elks Clubs

(To the best of my knowledge, this image is in the public domain.)

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April 2, 2017 Poem “Wood Ducks at Dawn”

NaPoWriMo 2017 April 2

Wood Ducks at Dawn
for Karla

Each day is distinct
with wonder: thunder,
moonlight, northern
auroras—each has its
particular aura of delight.

Many years ago,
I began scanning trees
hoping hard to see
the tell-tale red and teal
flash of a wood duck.

But these elegant birds
remained only words,
pictures in a flat book.
I began to doubt
they were 3-D real.

Still, each morning, I look
into the garden. Last week,
I saw three flashing beaks
high in this walnut tree.
Mallards? In trees?

I crept quietly out
into the morning breeze
with my long lens, wary
of startling. It was there I
captured my dream quarry

with photos and even
a short clip of brief flight.
Then I soared back
to the kitchen, quite certain
suddenly, of wonder;

that today holds
something extraordinary.

Leslie Schultz

Many thanks to my sister, Karla, for her examples of patient watching and the long lens, and to my husband, Tim, for his patience in helping me learn the ins and inside-outs of a smart phone!

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April 1, 2017 “Sonnet Despite Rain”

NaPoWriMo 2017 April 1

Sonnet Despite Rain
for E. K.
 
I have a friend who sings each time it rains,
who might, for all I know, dance in it, too.
Even the melancholy moans of trains
sliding through wet nights take on a lighter hue
for her, as if, speeding down now-slick tracks,
all the freight cars are crammed with happy news—
checks, cards, and letters spilling from mail sacks,
all addressed to her, rain-washed clean of woes.

I like the idea of a gentle rain
coaxing flowers from dusty, barren ground
each April, inciting swells of bird song.
Yet actual rain clouds bring me real pain—
drumming their melancholy tapping sound,
insisting my day and my world are wrong.

Leslie Schultz

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