December 26, 2017

Fredrick Zydek

A LETTER TO MY MOST RECENT DEAD

Lately grief clings to me like the smell of cigars
that cleaves to my grandfather’s old green
sweater albeit fifty-some years since he passed.
And he wasn’t even the beginning of it. First
came his beautiful son named Frances. Grandpa

was quick to follow. After that they began to drop
like flies. Eva Mae Marris fell out of a truck
and split open her head in front of the grade school;
Aunt Lucille and Uncle George lingered in front
of their deaths so long we prayed for their transitions.

Some mornings my dead are lined up all around me.
Mother and my nephew Todd, Aunt Madgel, Jack
Lemmon, Veronica and Emory, my old high-school
chum, Jack Hamilton and my friend Tom Houlahan
whose Down’s syndrome didn’t keep him from

lecturing at Oxford. Francis and George Dean,
Bette Hays and my dogs Abby and Artie who
passed within days of each other. Everywhere
I look the dead stand with me. Sometimes I hear
the sounds of their voices and know it is not memory

I hear but the voices themselves. In ways I cannot
name, they are as alive as my nephew Jim from
Shelton and my friend Derrel from Memphis with
whom I’ll dine this evening. I go among them
reciting their names as if they were sacred mantras.

from Rattle #17, Summer 2002

__________

Fredrick Zydek: “I read and write poetry because it continues to amaze me how a few dark marks on a piece of paper can bloom into images and metaphors that question, reveal, and gladden the mystery of the life experience. It’s an addiction that sustains me.” (web)

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October 19, 2012

Fredrick Zydek

WALKING IN THE BUCKLEY GRAVEYARD

I greet these stones like family, give them
freshly picked ferns and trilliums because
no other gifts are as real. I go among
the graves naming what I can of all the risks
we take with eternity. I call them by name,

wonder at all the ways my footsteps measure
the little spaces between us, the stubborn
luggage I carry in my heart like an anvil, dusty
memories that reduce life to a single struggle,
a solitary reason for visiting in the first place.

I want neither sympathy nor science. I want
to know if the darkness is without a mother
too, if there’ll ever be a summer when no one
drowns, if we’ll find something more than dust
at the water hole. Don’t tell me these are just

names carved in stone or that nobody is really
here. Each has a voice of its own—a history
my footsteps call from the graves. Dare I dance
to the music of time, celebrate these departures,
wonder why everything in me wants to sleep here?

from Rattle #23, Summer 2005

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