Poetry |

“His Shaving Cuts” “Practice” and “Without You”

His Shaving Cuts

 

 

His shaving cuts, his big brow bones,

that quick smile. He stands in the doorway

 

under the skylight in a freak shine of sun,

snow bright. The whole city’s blinded,

 

shovelers out in their shades on every street,

bend and toss, dangerous pavement.

 

But not to him.  Schoolboy grin, bits of tissue

stuck to his cheek, he’s thinking snow day,

 

canceled work, where are my gaiters?

Then a quick kiss and out the door.

 

Shush of his skis gliding down the street

past the stench and groan of snow blowers.

 

Where does Spirit live?  Can it be held

in language, in giddy words unhindered

 

like the twittering of birds?  Not rules,

but joy where I see only work.

 

This kind of breaking and entering

I can take. Him stepping into snowshine,

 

even if it so welcomes, so blazes around him

there’s no way back.

 

 

≈     ≈     ≈     ≈     ≈

 

 

Practice

 

 

It all clouds, crowds back — my sister

hunched over the keys, cluster of notes

her hands can’t reach or make fast enough.

She tries over and over that one tiny patch

of Bach, pulled out from the rest like rubble

at the shore we’d poke through for treasure.

 

“If you are squeamish,” Sappho says,

“don’t prod the beach rubble,” Sappho

who lived by the sea, soaking in its rhythms,

that first heavy wave shush hitting shore,

then the next softer shush and again, shush.

My sister shushed me as over and over

 

she prodded those keys until finally

a cloud would burst, her fists would slam

down in a crash of sound, a wail of how

she’ll never get it right, never be good

enough, it’s too hard.  But then the storm

would pass and she’d be trying again.

 

For years I heard only repeated pieces

like our old Evinrude refusing to start,

the choke not right, the engine not

catching, no sputter and shift into glide.

I had no clue what magnificent cargo

my sister was trying to haul, what was

 

inside the piano and inside her, depths

the ocean only hints at tossing up rubble,

fragments of Sappho, notes my sister now

lifts off the page, pours through her hands,

until if you didn’t know you’d think

it was always easy, always whole.

 

 

≈     ≈     ≈     ≈     ≈

 

 

Without You 

 

 

First time I listen to Thelonious Monk

without you, the recording we left in the car

that ends with the band working out a tune,

the start and stop of it before flow, Monk’s

voice coming as if from beyond the grave.

 

I saw graves from the church parking lot

where I waited to meet our friend M

to walk her new dog you’ve never seen,

10 pounds — you’d chuckle, the way it runs

on short legs like a windup toy.

 

First pretzels I’ve eaten without you —

leg cramps, so our son said they’d help,

the salt, which people called me in contrast

to sweet you, which must be right, given how

mosquitoes passed by me to swarm you

 

as when I first took you to the ocean

where we kissed, until you started jerking,

slapping your arms. Weird. But then I saw

you were getting bitten, so we stopped,

then resumed kissing in the car. First time

 

I thought of that in months.  People say

memories console, but without you?

All those jazz ballads I can’t listen to

without you.  First food binge, chocolate,

even before I got home from the store,

 

and later too many pretzels as if I ate

for us both. We were such a both,

watching movies on the couch, our hands

meeting in the popcorn bowl, so we’d grab

fingers and kiss awhile, then have to rewind.

 

Our granddaughter texted pictures of frogs

I looked at without you, thinking how you

would have belched, made those rib-bit sounds,

and bugged out your eyes, then said what a good

photographer she’s become. I took a chance

 

and walked to the pond where we’d listen

to frogs.  But it was nearly dry from drought —

no dragon flies, no lily pads, just soggy leaves

on the bottom, black muck, green algae scum.

See what’s become of the world without you?

 

Contributor
Betsy Sholl

Betsy Sholl’s ninth collection of poetry is House of Sparrows: New and Selected Poems (University of Wisconsin, 2019), winner of the Four Lakes Prize.  She teaches in the MFA in Writing Program of Vermont College of Fine Arts and served as Poet Laureate of Maine from 2006 to 2011.

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