April 27, 2018 NaPoWriMo Challenge Poem: “I Imagine I’m Moving in Water”

I Imagine I Am Moving in Water

I’m just standing in my kitchen
in the early morning darks,
but I imagine, slowly at first,
that I am swimming toward the day
ahead, like I used to swim toward
the blue raft in the far-off middle
of that lake at Camp Birchwood,
hoping I could make it over green lengths,
glide over the snags and slime, weeds
beneath me, tickling fish for company.

Peanut, my small dog, looks at me
oddly, yawns, brushes my ankles.

The only water is held by the kettle
over blue flame. I stand near the stove,
make hesitant motions toward
the ceiling. Is this the breast stroke?
My arms arc and contract, tire. But I
keep going, adding legs, bending
my knees, bobbing up on my toes,
whole being flailing, never reaching
the ceiling yet confident the new day
is out there, and that I will arrive,

spent but happy. Later, I will pull myself
onto the blue raft of another evening.

Leslie Schultz

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April 26, 2018 NaPoWriMo Challenge Poem: “Coasters”

Coasters

I’ve been the type who keeps plenty at hand.
Protecting the furniture
is second nature.

Yet, I am noticing, with each pump
of my heart, a certain tiny
fling of abandon;

someone small inside me who seeks
the thrill of discrete danger,
blasts of wind, speed.

She is getting closer to the crest, the place
before the plunge, and she might
take a small risk,

disregard the safety bar across her knees,
wave her arms in wild joy—
even screeeeeeam!

Leslie Schultz

Photo by Paul Brennan (Shutterstock; used with permission)

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April 25, 2018 NaPoWriMo Challenge Poem: “Opinion Piece: Afternoon Interlude”

Recycled Glass Path (photo: Karla Schultz)

Whooping Crane Vocalizing (photo: Karla Schultz)

Opinion Piece: Afternoon Interlude

Yesterday, perched on a chair,
in a friend’s lofty house,
knitting a sock of maroon wool,
discussing difficult new fiction,

I dropped my knitting, half-rose to stare:
down through the wide, clean window.
Over tufts of straw-bleached grass
and a partly thawed pond,

the low, long, elegant swoop
of a lone sandhill crane
flowed to its conclusion
oblivious of utterance. Full

of its own light and syntax,
punctuated only by wing
and pinion, it appeared to be made
solely of cadence, of insight.

Leslie Schultz

Whooping Crane Preening (photo: Karla Schultz)

Sadly, I have no photographs of Sandhill Cranes. These photos were all taken at the International Crane Foundation in Baraboo, Wisconsin. (The last image is one I took; the others are all by my accomplished sister!)

May you soar today in your daily rounds! Leslie

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April 24, 2018 NaPoWriMo Challenge Poem: “Good Weather in Rice County”

Good Weather in Rice County

No smog here or typhoons
or salt-baked land.
This is blizzard country.
Occasions of roof-splintering hail.
Some weeks, acres of grey drizzle,
lingering fogs,
molds and toadstools jubilant.

Sudden afternoons, skies turn
eerily green, lindens utterly
still, poised
for the slash of twisters,
snap of downed power lines,
barricades of trees
unnaturally horizontal.

Or the usually placid
Cannon River, turns
torrential, runs
out of bounds,
floods our ears
like the foaming rhetoric
of fascist orators.

Soon the stench of manure,
drifting from fields circling
the town, will cling to everything;
Asian beetles will infest
our roses and wainscoting;
and it won’t be just the heat
but the humidity.

Today, though, mild April
sun exhilarates. Girls don
flimsy dresses. Daffodils shoulder
up through muddy duff,
and Siberian scilla wash
through scuffs of dry leaves,
wave after wave.

Today, it is as if blue
shadows from these inert mounds
of snow have run away,
stolen from sidewalk margins
to limestone building edges; as if pale
suggestions are leaping into
heart-cracking, chromatic tune.

Leslie Schultz

All the images in this post were taken in this month within walking distance of my home. I still can’t get used to the sight of bare legs and spaghetti straps!

Hoping your internal and external weather today is heavenly! Leslie

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News Flash! THE MIDWEST QUARTERLY Published My Poem “Sunday Dinners”

My poem, “Sunday Dinners,” inspired by memories of meals served in her tiny but immaculate dining room by my Grandma Schultz, has just been published in The Midwest Quarterly (I am including this poem, along with many other poems inspired by family and friends, in my third collection of poems (currently in manuscript form.)

This is a journal I am savoring–scholarly prose and poetry alike. I was especially taken with the analysis what might be called a “double doppleganger” –human and architectural — in Henry James’ eerie story, “The Jolly Corner;” and a moving, pointed, yet funny poem by Nathaneal Tagg, about our responses to extinction of other species, called “Photo Ark.”

It is a particular delight that this came to my mailbox during National Poetry Month!

LESLIE