Anna Eleanor Roosevelt Roosevelt
The Guest
From blood splattered cups to peace without borders,
she came and she went, leaving love in all quarters.
~Ann Wachter
Home, home swirls like a knot entwined
upon a crab tree trunk, beckoning me to climb,
climb its woody tome, its musky scent
scraping my knees as I grasp branch
after branch, lifting my body upward, unwinding,
fashioning, fashioning home, home’s brief embrace.
Bell’s chime above a bridge, a bridge leaving home,
home where crossing’s bent arm blockades
passages’ girth never caressing infancy’s
bay, breaking me against ocean’s waves;
crashing rocks ahead, squeezing my brows tight
like a bull dog’s whimper after facing down terrors,
hoping mental plates hold until beacon’s next light —
never knowing home, home.
My childhood home was homeless haven —
Father’s devotion held me steady for a time;
motherless challenges crept about each hideaway’s open door.
Good granny, good aunties welcomed my spirited vigor
but left no lies lying next to my bed.
My parents became the lessons I learned,
reflection’s bequest from all I’d yearned.
Each starling day bids me express myself beyond —
natal down plucked away, plucked away
tranquility’s delights. Slippery shaft — abroad place to abroad
place abroad — I slice headlong, reserving energy
from foundation’s edge — home, home — wing’s consonant
fit, one feather with the other, ceding my flight beyond
cloud’s mist, never beyond home. Home. Home.
I stand tall, discerning shades of grey;
bleak shadows casting home, home along golden paths, spiraling
spiraling about pillars, pillars of salt wielded upon others’ homes, homes.
I manage well caring for downtrodden folks,
warming them with my swaddlings, my swaddlings.
My sinewy form strengthens as I climb home’s spiral stairs;
chiseled boxes — up one, step, up one, step, up one — glowing, white,
clouds absorb my expertly transformed, feathered foils —
fastened with silk threads — never weak, I open my ears and do not peep.
Distant cousin’s proposal gathers me — home, home.
One tidbit — one challenging, charming vice;
my new home, my home,
home holds enchantment’s price.
Mansion’s masterings abeam Abel Brown’s shanty-like cot;
next my home, home — Val-Kill’s lodgings, my nest — dancing,
telling stories, picnics under home’s pines
floating ‘long river’s twines.
Glistening meanderings, watery trails cycling home, home;
mingle in pond’s ripplings, trickling salamanders, dragonflies, crickets.
Grasp sextant’s skillful span, angle human right’s merits dangling above cliff’s cure;
give home, home, home to those whose tomb contains evils and horrors hidden deep —
hell revealed to the world after chimney’s sweep. Battle fear and its alllies —
those that tend hell’s garden with a blow-filled glance;
those hoarding gold coins to purchase contempt — carry me home, home to serve and serve;
knot imbedded in the old tree trunk; my keep’s chattel, my home, my home.
See also the Copperfield Review published June 12, 2018