Poetry |

The Poets of Martha’s Vineyard, part II

Three Poems by Francie Camper

 

 

What Is Certain

 

Black lace of trees against a winter dawn

sky. The tree, the rock, a river.

 

His hand on the small of my back.

 

Wind casting back the spray of the wave —

spray caught in sunlight.

 

How the sun sets as always, moon rises,

tides shift twice in a day.

 

That this will end badly.

 

Atmospheric river, a cliff collapses,

a country teeters then falls,

 

deafening echo of history,

 

mind-numbed, that turning away,

a wave of denial — I have caught that too.

 

I still hide in the beauty.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Where I Am From

 

I have come for a wallet.

 

The man at the leather store

has narrow eyes

disturbing teeth

and a big story that I do not care to hear.

 

But I am often mistaken for friendly

and so he begins:

Where are you from?

 

I give him an answer he already knows.

The day is cold and blindingly bright.

I believe that people are good.

 

Where are you from?

I am from here.

My father was from Lebanon.

 

There is warmth in the flash

of his smile. I am Syrian, he tells me.

It is all one country, Lebanon, Syria,

Jordan except for those damned Turks,

it would still be one country.

 

His story picks up speed

and his mouth twists, I can tell,

he doesn’t know what to say

about the Israelis, it’s more of a mumble

the Jews from Europe, they suffered too 

much, now they want to kill all of us.

 

Not hatred, more like wisdom.

I cannot solve this, nor can he.

I buy a hand-sewn wallet

make my way out of the store.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Burial

                                                                                    

When I didn’t know how to bury my mother, I called my friend Henry who moonlighted

as a mohel and knew all manner of Jewish ritual and though I knew relatively little,

 

in those long hours, after I’d chosen her suit and jewelry, thought about what wood

finish, tried to remember the coffins of relatives — something told me to call Henry.

 

What I told him was that her sister, aunt, and cousins would expect her to be sent out

in style and though her grandparents who escaped the pogroms were Orthodox, if I chose

 

the traditional shroud and plain pine box, there would be a chorus of they sent you in that?

and she would feel as she had throughout her life — less than. I needed to know what the burial

 

ritual meant. Henry said that there are two times in life when each of us is naked before

God — at birth and at death and that between these two times we all go about living

 

our lives, we do our nonsense is what he said, and that if I chose her good suit and pearls

and a shiny box, they would say they sent you in that? It turned out to be a very good thing

 

that I made this choice because the grave they opened for her in the crowded family plot

was just big enough for the plain pine box, my shrouded little mother.

 

 

◆     ◆     ◆     ◆     ◆

 

 

Three Poems by Fan Ogilvie

 

 

The Thunder Over All

 

Everything and nothing

just like us all.

The flight attendant

serving dinner in the cockpit

to the captain

leaned against the button

which moved

the pilot

into the control yoke

and the plane dove

10,000 feet in seconds.

 

The thunder was silent

there was nothing to say.

God is the pilot, the plane, the attendant,

the dinner, control button, the yoke

every molecule from

 

every point to every point.

The thunder rumbled.

The thunder sympathizes

with 50 passengers hurt.

No one died.

 

The thunder sighed.

The skies are black

The earth is alight

The thunder can sleep

in control of his might.

And he reflects in silence.

 

Datta damyata dayadvam

Thank you Thomas Stearns.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Wet Or Dry

for Wislawa Szymborska

 

Take a look, a hard look

At a newborn baby

Almost edible you say

As wet as we get

From the placenta to naked body

 

To the breast to the bath —

Wet look from the eyes

Nose mouth wet bones

Inside mostly water —

Then from the long mirror

Look at us — our body our faces

Look back at us —

 

Dry as sand

When sand is dry

Cold, dry like dry canvas.

Then the baby cries

And we cry naked.

The rain pours then stops.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

It Is Easter

 

It is Easter

It is dark

I have died

Breath has not left

Nor vision

 

These words have no meaning

There are angels singing

But it is us

With no personhood

It is a singing halo

 

We are told all

There is to know

By the source

Of all there is

 

We will understand

Light and darkness

All blessings of life

As if for the first time

The universe will be revealed

And it will terrify

 

It may have been nothing

To nothing for some

It is not nothing

Anymore

Death is no more

 

Our guide is vibration

Music

Silence

Connection

Prayer

 

We will achieve love

We will enter love

We are stripped

Of wrong entered as a test

Dissolved and absolved

 

The day is breaking

It is Easter

And we are alive

Breathing

And seeing

 

 

✦     ✦     ✦     ✦.   ✦

 

 

Three Poems by Fran Schumer

 

 

The Reference Room at the Jersey City Library

 

Thanks for calling me, a voice not a recording,

in faltering English — your book is ready.

 

Thanks for working at the library, hours now limited,

closed Sundays, Wednesdays, Fridays.

 

Thanks for this building, old but beautiful, the marble stairs,

decorative iron railings, skylight, built in better days.

 

People came to read more than magazines.

Now some come to learn coding.

 

Thanks for the free computers.

Upstairs, an empty room.

 

Look at this, my husband says.

Rows and rows of reference books.

 

We walk along the silent aisles.

“Twentieth Century Literary Criticism,” untouched.

 

Thanks for all 52 volumes.

Thanks for this unused collection of Poetry Criticism.

 

It starts at the “Twa Corbies,” vol. 1. No one has checked any out.

Thanks for updating it anyway: Kevin Young, Volume 85.

 

Thanks for the complete set of the New Cambridge Medieval History,

all twelve volumes!  Thanks!

 

And … the Encyclopedia of the North American Colonies, including Nordic, Central

and Southeastern Europe. Western Europe updated this year to include information

about the War in Ukraine. Thanks!

 

Thanks for the books of maps, dishes, pottery;

Native American, enslaved people’s histories.

 

Thanks for the Encyclopedia of the Ghettos.

Thank you for this terrifying shelf, and this other — a History of Concentration Camps.

 

Thanks for reminding me that books like these, all of these, in every aisle, were burned —

and even if hardly anyone ever looks at them, they’re here.

 

Thanks.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Wash Ashore

 

We sold a piano,

tossed books into dumpsters,

parents into graves.

 

This is what happens

when you move to an island

in later years —

 

Your roots like new grass

planted on eroding dunes,

too frail to grab on to new life.

 

Then one day you see a man

in yoga class you met at a party

the other night. A new root takes hold.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Triggering Town, 1967

— homage to an essay by Richard Hugo on poetic theory

 

This is my town that no longer exists,

my father’s store now a boutique —

The scent of roach spray brings tears

though it’s been years

since vats of chemicals crowded

the rear of that dark, gloomy space,

years since I breathed the poisons

he mixed on paper plates,

petals around the stick shift

of his tiny Hillman Husky car,

its color a lovely powder blue.

 

This is my town that no longer exists.

Grates covered the doors

of the store after break ins.

After one, my father and brother

drove at midnight to board up

the hole in the roof. I was a girl,

exiled at home in my bed,

imagining that hole, and beyond it

stars in the dark, velvet sky.

I could dream. Shy, my father

was shy with me, his only daughter.

When he told me what they had

to clean from the floor, he did not

use an expletive. Instead, he said

the burglar was so scared, he –

and this my father bent to whisper –

“defecated.” My father said this

without malice or disgust, only pity.

 

This is my town that no longer exists,

my mother ailing, my father deep

in a grave I will visit maybe once,

that town so far in the past,

beneath leafy branches,

an arcade over a city street.

On a bench in a park, he points

to the shape of a perfect tree.

This is beauty, he says.

This was my triggering town.

Contributor
Fan Ogilvie

Fan Ogilvie‘s most recent poetry collection is Dust Is The Only Secret (2024, privately published). She taught English and poetry in Washington, DC, New Haven, New York City, and on Martha’s Vineyard, and worked for three years at the Dukes County House of Correction, where she and Katie Upson published two volumes of poetry by the inmates. She is now facilitator of the Cleaveland House Poetry Workshop, the oldest (60 years) continuous poetry group in the USA.

Contributor
Fran Schumer

Fran Schumer’s poetry, fiction, and prose have appeared in The New York Times, The North American Review, The Nation, and other publications. She received a Goodman Loan Grant Award for Fiction from the City University of New York, and a Martha’s Vineyard Institute of Creative Writing poetry fellowship. Her chapbook, Weight, was published in 2022. A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., she studied political theory at college but wishes she had spent more time reading Keats. She lives in Oak Bluffs MA.

Contributor
Francie Camper

Francie Camper lives half-time on Martha’s Vineyard until she manages to buy a one-way ticket. Her work has appeared in Pulse: Voices From the Heart of Medicine, Indolent Books: Second Coming, and the Massachusetts Bards Poetry Anthology (2025). She is a clinical social worker and in her off-time may often be found swimming in open water.

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