Monday, July 21, 2008


She sits in a quiet reverence,

a sack of groceries at her side,

riding the St.Charles line home

as she has done every day now

for almost forty years.


The route is mapped out before her,

sights and sound memorized

like the worn photos of her wedding day.


A strange comfort, these clanks and hums,

these breaks in the neutral ground.

She crosses herself as the churches pass by,

hands as delicate and soft as tissue,

as brown as the leaves on the trees passing by

in the bleak light of a late november afternoon

Oak, magnolia and willow,

Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
A little old woman that sat across from my wife and I on the st.Charles Line trolley in New Orleans on our honeymoon. She looked ancient, tissue thin brown skin on hands that delicately moved to cross herself everytime we passed a catholic church. It was a beautiful act, this elderly woman honoring the Holy Spirit every time we passed the Host in another church. 8 years later, I can still see her in my mind as if it happened this morning.I wrote this in response to Katrina. in the hell filled days follwoing her landfall, I found myself worrying about this nameless woman, hoping she was safe with family somewhere else.

The Last Stand at Croft, N.C.

On down 115,

Sitting on top of soybean field,

rusted Norfolk Southern stories

and

VFW Hall

are pumpkins,

$5.99 each,

Sakrete, Gleen paints and Basic Slag

Tin washtubs, rank-in-file,

staunch, upright,alert,

stand vigil over wrought iron

and plate glass,

Oak Grove Barbecue (only $7.00 a plate),

Imperial Gas, and 8.9 acres for sale

on Bob Beatty Road.

Since 1890.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Spanish Town Porch

It occurs to me as I watch the January rain come down


in hard, grey Saturday afternoon sheets,


That I have loved these streets with


their damp laughter and dusty sighs,


I have savored moments spent under


this skeletal canopy, with its thin silvery specters


so many ghosts crowded into an empty doorway,


peering down in silence at laughing couples running


hand-in-hand down January's crooked sidewalk,


the call of calliope in pursuit of them


as they rush towards dry rooms and warm kisses.