September 24, 2012

Fran Markover

HISTORY’S TRAIL

He will soon forget the girl
who rests in his guesthouse.
He does not care if she is pretty,
where she is from. No need
for her name. It is enough
she stays the night, this friend
of a friend. And when he first
enters her bed, lifts blankets,
her gown, he notes how she
startles more than scares.
Her body is no place special,
thighs spread before him like
public gardens, Copley Square,
statues he passes every day.

She, too, forgets the details
in travels beyond the mattress,
beyond unknown fingers inside her.
Her images of the man flickering,
over-exposed. She wishes for stops
softer than unattended sobs, less
intrusive than stars if there were any.
His only words enjoying Boston?
guideposts to sheets and pillows
cobbling like worn city streets.
In the dark, the air is old. She tastes
after-shave, breathes a brackish
harbor when she re-visits his bed.

from Rattle #23, Summer 2005

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August 9, 2011

Fran Markover

ADDICTIONS COUNSELOR
for my clients

Sometimes, when healing words escape
I think of the gray squirrel who muscled
from the office chimney.
Whose sooty head poked through the pie plate hole
where my wood stove had stood.
The animal transfixed, my client
jumping from a chair, her story interrupted—
mother inaccessible, unfulfilled,
a daughter’s bottled angst, black-out nights.

Later, I read Addictions Professional,
of White Ladies, Red Devils, Angels’ Dust.
How each patient climbs from a different darkness.
I think of the squirrel who clawed his way
from the amazement of my building
as if he could grasp hunger, bottom, ascent—
bury the nuggets for winter’s stash.
How I chased him from room to room.
Easy Does It. Let Go. Surrender. …
Swing wide the blessed door.

from Rattle #34, Winter 2010
Tribute to Mental Health Workers

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