photoart: ralph murre
Anomalies
by
Marc J. Frazier
…for everything flowers from within, of
self-blessing;
though sometimes it is necessary
to reteach a thing its loveliness…
—Galway Kinnell
In the endless
mall of Florida—a French patisserie run by French people.
Birds flit for
crumbs.
Sherbet
umbrellas beckon Town Cars of the aged to dock nearby.
Scents of
hibiscus, sunset-hued blossoms of tropical vines blend with that of yeast,
humid asphalt, and Estée Lauder.
There is no
one left to love.
Sometimes the
evidence is overwhelming.
Sometimes I
wish a gull will miss landing on its piling.
The real truth
is that nothing mitigates.
Lonely birds
call through a pink dusk.
If I could
name the flora and fauna, I could cope with uncertainty.
I could walk
outside to a gator in the pool.
Surprising
things happen.
A double
murderer was just arrested in Chicago
where he’d lived as a poet for twenty years.
I have to
write so many words just to survive.
How many will
it take to endure? To be happy?
The many
places I’ve been make me like every place less.
I love the
romantic excess of Spanish explorers: cities of gold, fountain of youth.
Here the old
grow younger or think they do.
Who am I to
shadow conquerors?
Sometimes a
clean, well-lighted place is fine.
Sometimes
nothing is enough.
Always that
restlessness in the stalls.
The need to be
touched.
The need to be
reminded of my loveliness.
As if I am one
of the few who are chosen.
Carlos Fuentes
described Frida Kahlo with her jangling jewelry and intensity as her own
opera.
At times I am
so tame I wonder if even the trained can prepare me for a return to the
wild.
At times the
Leo in me sees the world as collateral.
A woman in a
poem hopes in the growth of two dozen seeds.
The man thinks
she expects too much: “To grow her a whole new life.”
What can I
expect here beside the ocean?
I do not
ponder the damage done—a cul de sac of regret.
Loss.
Not everything
happens for a reason.
I hear orchids
grow in wet seclusion.
Stones are
silent by choice.
Water builds
only to lose itself.
Blue calms my
tendency to wander, to see other sides.
Life, like
anything, is a habit, can be found almost anywhere, can happen to anyone.
~ first
published in Rhino