June 20, 2016

Russell Colver

LAMB

It was Tony’s idea,
to roast one over an open fire
some weekend while the weather
was still fine.
Tony, who ran the oceanographic lab
as a buffer between his cherished staff
and the higher-ups.
Who every Friday brought
a lavish lunch for everyone
he’d prepared the night before
so they learned to keep silverware
in their desks and often diverted
beakers for the wine.
Who came home one evening
to find his wife and all his furniture
gone.
Who late one summer afternoon
when we stopped by
had covered every surface
of his fragrant kitchen
with branches of basil
laid out to dry.

Who led us out to his garden
where he’d been harvesting tomatoes
and we pulled warm globes from
bitter vines, ate most of them
on the spot, their taut skins
splitting in our mouths until it seemed
as if we were tasting the sun
made flesh on our tongues.

Who later sliced an eggplant
into a stack of perfect wafers,
breaded and crisped them in
a transparency of oil poured out,
and we sat at the lone formica table
in this most radiant of rooms
in this most abundantly empty of houses
feasting on the complicated sweetness
of the earth.

from Rattle #51, Spring 2016

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Russell Colver: “I like the way in which, unexpectedly, something entirely ordinary can suddenly develop an aura, so that it remains entirely what it is while at the same time flaring up, as if someone had set it alight. These are the things I remember, the experiences I try to recreate as poems.”

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December 25, 2014

Russell Colver

THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS 2014

Political Version

’Twas the night before Christmas and all through the House
not a creature was stirring (nothing new about that).
Nominations and bills were hung up in committee
with no hope, for ideologues show no pity.
New senators, too, were home tucked up in bed
dreaming of wall maps in all shades of red,
and voters who slept through the mid-term election
were wrapped in thin blankets of sad disaffection,
while out in the world there continued such clatter
it was hard to decide where to look for the matter.
Ebola, Crimea, Boko Haram,
Gaza’s on fire, 370’s gone,
ISIS brutality boggles the mind
while CIA torture has tarnished our shine.
The Arctic is darkening: amplification
enlarges the specter of earth’s degradation.
Ferguson streets are lit up with contention
for race is a subject we’ve found hard to mention.
Yet on the Ellipse in the dark of the night
kid-programmed Christmas trees sparkled with light.
And what to our wondering eyes did appear
but the POTUS equipped with executive gear.
Standing alone as the head of the nation
he took one bold step to repair immigration.
With a swish of his pen he opened up Cuba
and then disappeared to the land of the hula.
But I heard him exclaim, as he left for his fun,
“Merry Christmas to all, now let’s get something done!”

from Poets Respond
December 25, 2014

[download audio]

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Russell Colver: “Just read the ‘White House Holiday Poem (Basement Version).’ Doggerel begets doggerel. And how much fun was that!” (website)

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