March 7, 2019

Phyllis M. Teplitz

PENDERECKI’S SOUL

While I write,
I play Shearing
on Dave’s stereo.

God, I remember
those last few weeks,
him plugged into this,
his life support.
How he main-lined Penderecki.
I imagine his C/T scan showing
these tuneless passages
as strange hieroglyphs,
metastasizing.

A lab tech would spot it
as abstract art,
sell pirated copies. The Guggenheim
would showcase
this unsigned masterpiece,
“Penderecki’s Soul.”

Cryptologists, musicologists, oncologists
who came to witness the aberration
might have thrown up their hands.

In the O.R. no way they could
carve out the cacaphony.
If speakers were attached,
he would broadcast
the collage of eerie sounds
through the hospital. Terrified patients
would stuff cotton in their ears.

I suppose he really heard music
in those CDs—
some orchestral battle.
The clash of percussionist armies
against yearning cellos and violin angst.
Or maybe just any barrage of loud noise
would fill the vacuum: his entourage
of students, gone. Friends, gone.
His doctors and me, all he had left.

Tympani battalions only masked
his real war. No succession
of specialists could quell
the insurrections.

Any more than I could.
A pair of hands.
An empty form.

from Rattle #23, Summer 2005

__________

Phyllis M. Teplitz: “When my husband died ten years ago, I attended a creative writing class. It was something to do. Tom Centolella, who taught the class, ignited my passion for poetry. Now, I can’t not write. It’s the way I escape my boundaries. It’s how I know who I am.”

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October 8, 2012

Phyllis M. Teplitz

UNSONG

Poems torn from
my eighty years,
scribbled on scraps
or typed on my Mac

now lie piled in files, stored
in drawers, stacked on tables,
copied on floppies,
saved on my hard drive.

Still, I pictured them scattered
by a thoughtless flurry
of wind,
drenched by winter

showers. All
my meticulous metaphors,
melted. My carefully crafted words,
reduced to meaningless blurs.

from Rattle #23, Summer 2005

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October 6, 2012

Phyllis M. Teplitz

QUANTUM PHYSICS-TRICKS

This morning my glasses weren’t
right by my book
where I left them last night.

Nor anyplace else I looked in the house—
by the computer mouse,
even in the fridge where I once

found the sugar bowl, AWOL.
My sapphire-blue sweater,
heisted, I’m sure,

by some mischievous poltergeist.
I once saw a Cairo airport photo—
a mountain of luggage, unclaimed.

I imagine somewhere there’s a tower
of my treasures, un-named,
long since spirited away—

maybe my seed pearls, crystal beads,
my dragon kimono,
slinky silk, Chinese red.

Ten satin scarves, hand painted.
Two cashmere coats. Twenty-one
umbrellas left on busses and trains.

Still, another hypothesis
I have yet to prove—I believe
the atoms in my glasses came unglued.

Just flew apart, all over
the blue carpet.
Even the ceiling, the walls,

invisibly messed
with recalcitrant optical particles
refusing to stay coalesced.

from Rattle #23, Summer 2005

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October 9, 2011

Phyllis M. Teplitz

EVERYTHING I WANTED I HAD

          a dime to sit through a Fred Astaire movie
twice, kids to play with after school,
parents who loved me, and four sisters.
June, in college, juggling boyfriends, May,

just two years behind, sang
at all the ladies’ clubs. Eleanor,
way ahead of me too. Thirteen.
I tried imagine being so grownup.

Sure, we quarreled, but sometimes
we had such fun making fudge, dancing
to Glen Miller’s Boogie Woogie,
in the upstairs hall.

It was my birthday, my first party ever.
We played musical chairs, upset the fruit basket.
And for once, I was the center of attention.
I remember two presents,

a tiny glass vase of jeweled flowers
that shone blue and red on my hand.
The best one, a real diary. It even had
a little gold key to lock up my secrets.

After everyone left, I went up to my room,
closed the door and told my diary,
I can’t believe it. At last.
I am ten years old.

from Rattle #26, Winter 2006
Tribute to the Greatest Generation

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February 11, 2010

Phyllis M. Teplitz

THE REDWOOD PLAGUE

My son came home from camping
in the Humboldt Redwoods        fresh green
                sprouts springing from his head.
Before the end of day I felt
my own saplings push up
                prickly stems.
In spite of attempts
to uproot them      my fast-growing sprouts
                stayed firmly planted.
One after another      the experts passed
on me      doctor to botanist
                  arborists to psychiatrist
and finally to the Department
of Communicable Disease
                who threw up their hands.

But the word had spread.

Hearing a hullabaloo           I looked out
to find paparazzi.
                swarming the yard      the street.
Phyllis, how did this aberration begin?
Can I touch them?      Will you give me a sprout
             for my garden?

Can you explain why this condition didn’t spread?
How does it feel?
      I snapped the blinds closed
             and took a pill.
The graft of pippins and cloning permission
I turned down.      Though I sold the movie rights
                to MGM for a mil
I wanted the whole affair to disappear.

In the morning
such a heady lightness
the yard         all quiet
               any hint of redwood scent         gone.

from Rattle #31, Summer 2009

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