Tuesday, January 15, 2019

New Introduction

The poems published here in 2019 are almost entirely poems that have not been published anywhere else. In most cases, I tried to get them published by a leading journal, since I think all of them are worthy, but at this point in my poetry writing career, I no longer have the persistence to keep sending them out to have someone else, often in online journals, approve of them when I can just publish them here.

His Final Gift



My parents had married three days after Valentine’s Day
In 1945. Sixty –six years later my mother carried
Bunches of fresh, bright freesias to my father’s
Grave in Oroville.

He had aspired to be a farmer all his life. in his very old age,
He pulled himself up for one last act of cultivation
Sowing a dozen bulbs under the bedroom window
Where he still slept

With my mother as he had for most of sixty years.
Soon after, his memory became only a memory to us
And he no longer slept with his wife. As with dreams
My father had had.

He told no one why he planted them there. My mother
Had forgotten about them as they lay dormant
In Natomas’ black soil even as his own memory
Quickly slipped away


With no trace of color, he freesias sat waiting for light
Then exactly one year after my father died, not a few
Robust pioneers burst through the Natomas crust thrusting
His persistence of love.

Cloud


I sort through my shoeboxes of photos;
Choose my memories with frenzied care
So that the best images can be scanned
And uploaded to the cloud. Cloud?

Isn't that where angels are supposed to dwell?

I do the same scanning with old letters
Even ones written before my birth
But mostly those that were sent to me
By friends and relations many now dead

Maybe sitting on the cloud to dwell with angels.

Then there are those photos and messages
Already bytten into the internet’s vastness
Yet somehow not yet immortal until
They are sent into my personal cloud

Where my own angels are dwelling

I squeeze my life from small black boxes
To redigitize them into something I can’t see
But I want my life to be scanned into a space
Where it means that I will live forever

A dark black cloud where I can always dwell.


Garden Sculpture



There were a dozen swords of glass--
Excalibured in cement bases
Impervious to would be kings--
Set in Ho’omaluhia ringing
The pathway so that art patrons saw
Flashes of chance light dancing,
Reflecting their invasion of nature

Reflecting their invasion of nature
Flashes of chance light dancing
Caught their vision with twinkled
Images of their own wonder
As they spot exotic plants, exploring
More than beauty penetrating to touch
A space in the mind beyond purchase

Set in a botanical paradise
Where light does not startle muses
But whose beams surprise wanderers
As they burn through leaves and bark
Impressing the suddenness of life
In flashes of chance light dancing,
Reflecting their invasion of nature.

Beatle Villanelle



Romantic songs no longer sell
But what the Beatles did still airs.
Their melody and lyrics fit so well

That it is impossible to tell
That their musical training was spare.
Romantic songs no longer sell

Since cruder lyrics cast a spell
On youths who can’t ever care
Whether melody and lyrics fit so well.

While some musician might be compelled
To seek success, he will scarcely dare
(Since romantic songs no longer sell)

To write a piece in which beauty dwells.
Thus with the jaded public will not share
His melody and lyrics that fit so well.

Though it remove us from our current hell
And this myth that we must beware
That romantic songs no longer sell
Though melody and lyrics fit so well

Friday, January 11, 2019

Surviving Love


It is possible to drown your children in love,
To immerse them so deeply in your caring
That they become oblivious to the deep
   Water of life.

Our daughters learned how to swim, to compete,
Literally, in meets with other children,
So we never felt we were sheltering them
   From reality.

Yet the lessons we had taught left them floating
On the illusion that their parents were, yes,
Immortal. Thus it was with my own parents
   Whose deaths submerged me

In those dreaded waters, sunken in darkness
Of an engulfing mourning. The deepest descent
Of that submergence matched the crest of the love
   They had given me.

So how can we place our daughters in that same
Black trench? It is not a choice any parent
Makes, yet since we have taught our children how to swim
   We hope they’ll survive.

Father's Flowers


Yes, Chelsea,
I will take the school photograph
That you give me for my birthday, as long as you promise
Not to weep in forty years when you open
A cardboard box with crispy strips
Of masking tape on its corners,       lift out
A wrinkled file from which a silverfish scoots
As you open it     to find this photo,
Along with the story you wrote
About the Hawaiian princess; hundreds of drawings
Of little mermaids, your Mom, and landscapes;
Forty-five Father’s Day cards.

I will not have shown these to you in decades
Any more than I would show you any flowers
You’ve given to me after they have withered,
Their aroma escaped with your childhood.

What Endures


He dies weeks short of their anniversary
It would have been sixty-five years that month.
Fifteen years since his mind became liquid from strokes
Draining memory

From he and my mother. Now he has not been home
For two years, his dementia trapping his mind
As the nursing home traps his body. He dies
So far from himself.

It takes her months to ignore the urge to go
To the home where he is no longer planted.
It had taken years to ignore the urge to reach
Out across their bed.

How long had it been since he had lain there?
Long enough that his indelible smell,
Once penetrated to the deepest channels
Of her memory,

No longer linger in the sheets. His towels
Still hold him as she left them on his racks
In the corner of the bathroom. She left
Them to touch what touched

His face every morning after he shaved.
She wondered if there are smells in Heaven.
Can she even doubt it? The best of lives
Must go on somewhere.

Sonnet on Seeing a Woman Smile





She was smiling about a memory she had;
From over fifty years ago of a walk on Sandy Beach
A memory about the end of her childhood
When Ryan had gently touched her face.

Her face has changed since then. Her smile
Is more assured and the look in her eye
Suggests that she hears distant melodies.
The voices of Alfred Apaka and the McGuires

Float through the salty mist, east of Aina Haina.
She had known Ryan for three years, but had thought
Him handsome only since Easter, never an inkling
That he would touch her, or be sent to Korea.

They never found his body. She found a husband
Six years later, lost him to her own memories.

The Last Goodbye





You never know when a goodbye will be the last.
When my father was in his sixties I knew his health
Was not great even though when he shook my hand
In our farewells,
His grip was strong
His hugs were tight.
And he endured through his eighties,
His grip ever lighter.
His hugs ever looser.

When transient ischemic attacks
Decimated his brain with neural debris, his eyes
Lost luster and his grip was so weak that he only waved.
No hugs.
Each time I bade him goodbye I thought it was the last.

He kept fooling me until the real last one.
I thought it was the last because he had not used my name
Once in my visit.
This time I was right.

So when I saw my daughter off at the Honolulu Airport
I did not shake her hand, but gave her a firm hug.
She has seen enough death in her life
That I think she might be wondering about my goodbyes.

All I can do is make sure I hug her tightly each time,
Keep my grip firm.

When Is Home a Dream?




It happens every time I return to Hawai`i,
The place I used to call Home; that place that seeded
My mind with memories so strong they penetrate
All of my nights whether I dream of it or not.

The green slopes of the Koolaus framed my every
Morning, as I took those bright cliffs of green
For granted, little knowing how their slopes were seeping
Into my mind long before I settled in Seattle.

Now, whether I go back to Honolulu for a few days
Or a few weeks, once I get back on the plane,
Get back to what I now call home, the old
Home turns again into a dream as if I had not

Been there at all. Or been there in a dream.
Or perhaps the dream is what is now. Or so it seems.

September Blossoms




I will be enchanted by dry remains
Of a flower lying on our window sill
Or withered in the car’s console
Where Diane had left them forgotten,
Lonely decorations once sought to enhance
That everyday that years of marriage fills
With a sameness that subtly builds
A lassitude that’s aimlessly sustained.

I used to ask her why she did not throw
Those blooms away, their scent long lost
And she would simply shrug, knowing
More about enchantment than I who toss
Away these delicate monuments. She has sown
More than fragrance in sprinkling blossoms

Descending



At 80 my father still growls at his tractor;
Still prowls his field first thing each morning
Just to absorb its light; still descends a levee
He climbs to look over his neighbors crops.
Still sometimes calls me, at 50, “Boy.”

He only called to me by my name once.
Before that, I knew that he knew it, because
He would refer to be by name when he spoke
Proudly of me to others. This one time no one
Else was there to hear him, but me.

It was an evening of my fourteenth year,
Out on the levee road with a ton of sand
Atop our pickup and a flat tire below, perched
Us perilously between oncoming traffic
And a roll down the steep levee bank.

We had to shovel a few hundred pounds
Of sand off, just so the jack could lift
The truck. While I stood sentinel to wave
At drivers coming around the levee’s bend
My father stooped to change the tire.

A loud thump and a sudden slump
Of the truck startled me, but not as much
As a mortal sound in my father’s voice
As his hand got trapped under the wheel
Because of the slipping jack. He yelled,

“Ken, my hand’s caught!” Acting as fast
As I could, I righted the jack, lifted the truck
And freed his hand, but imprisoned my future
With stark memory of my father’s descent
On that levee and hearing my name used in fear.

Afterwards



The morning after he came home from her service
He noticed a strand of her white hair
Upon the sink, where she would once have wiped it clean.
His first impulse was to brush

It into the trash, frail reminder of his loss.
Instead, he located an envelope
Put her hair in it as if he’d mail it to her.
He saw her hairbrush on their dresser

Both black and white hairs were tangled in its bristles.
He gently pulled them out and put them
In an envelope. He found another strand near
The bedstead where she had read each night.

He found a black strand stuck in their kitchen cupboard
Under one of her teacups. Careful
Housekeeper when she was healthier, she’d have been
Aghast at his small discoveries.

He smiled as he imagined her expression
If he’d shown her the envelope; nine
Hairs, saved from a time when she drifted through their house
Now sealed in white, safe from time itself.

A Wedding Farewell




Weddings’ white brilliance radiated joy
As she walked by my side toward her groom
Whose face was bright with that wonder
Of change perched on his eyebrows.

So much light placed me in shadows suited
To the black I wore from toe to neck
As for a funeral and I sensed a dying,
Not then, but later as their jet lofted away

To their honeymoon in Japan. A part
Of me that was a father became extinct,
For everywhere I looked, I no longer found
The tiny rhythm that once kept time

With my pulse, tapping out a tuneless duet
Or a waltz with a small partner. I still danced
With my wife, but there were so many nevers

Lying at me feet, that I could not retrieve
Them before they slipped into a past
Where a little girl once lived with me.