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The following are selections from the works submitted by the first, second, and third place winners in the Summer School Poetry Contest.
First Place Davenport Plumer
NEW HOUSES
The field my son and I were walking in
Snicked with broken corn stalks
And taller, stalky weeds.
Our shoes were powdered brown
with dust spooring from the leaves and twigs.
We walked beneath the reining sun
That burned the field
And made us squint
Like snow-wise esquimo,
Toward the new white house
We were investigating.
We were walking from my son's school
(Where a music festival had made us restless).
When he entered in the fall,
Men were harvesting corn
where the new house stood.
Later they bulldozed off the rich corn-feeding layer,
And the dense spoor-fine dust
Swirled across the school, powdering every child.
And still in May the flattened space
(too dead to be a field) behind the new houses
Looked ruined--as by a retreating army.
What must have been bulldozer tracks
Looked more like
The crossing, circling prints left
One rank and sweating Plistoscine
Evening as male and female, mailed and plated
Reptiles circled in a dance of mating,
Or two bulls horned and splattered each other's doomed blood.
Across this cross-tracked waste,
Across the cracked plated of clay,
The exposed skeleton of glacial stones and sand and
The few cigar-shaped stubs of corn,
We walked toward the house.
Shadeless, it swam in the sun-swept field
In the currents and eddys of dust and heat.
Its cellar windows are empty, eyeless
Perhaps blown in by whatever monster
Skinned and gouged in the field.
The wires for the door bell hung in a way
That pictured London and Cologne
When all the walls hung with shreds of pipe and wire.
Squinting into white-x'd windows
We circled the house, deciding, finally
That we liked the cellar best,
A dark mushroomy hole that gave
Back a ghostly echo
when we yelled and whistled in
The eyeless windows.
On three sides the loam
was pushed against the house
In long, surf-like crests.
On the back side, two mine-made holes were blown
Just large enough to hide my son
As he swept the dusty field
With his machine gun.
He called to me from the hole he warred in:
"Is our house built on an old farm too?"
"Yes," I said, pulling him from the hole,
"Many houses are."
"It's too bad they have to knock the farm down."
"Yes, but some just fall by themselves."
"Well, I won't knock down any farms to build my house."
"We'll see," I said, starting back toward the school.
* * *
. . . the house I lived in as a boy
was small and white--across the road
from my grandfather's farm: a low
dark house, a dozen saddle-backed
sheds and coops and a huge red-gray barn
that leaned both in and out
held up and pulled down by honeysuckle
and stitched at top and bottom by pigeons and dogs.
. . . the house I lived in was newer
by one hundred years than the barn
and both of them have been churned
under, and new houses
seeded in their places,
and I suppose that's a comfort
against the awful fact of death.
Second Place Anne Winters
FLOODMARKS To R.G.G.
i
Love from your tall house in the hills
Highest above the bay
You walked down once by the glittering tide
The full noon of the day
You turned to me where you stood on the shore
Among your men and smiled
I laid my hand against my cheek
And stared back like a child
Your eyes, their harsh green light-your hair
Blown back in dark gold strands
Were the emerald drench of ocean
The sun's fist on the sands
Strong winds and hours of afternoon
Had slept on your arms and hands
That had the hot and silky look
Of amber from far lands
When sunset brought your fleet back in
You stood in the bow at case
When the first ship crossed the tidal swell
Between the great shafts of light that fell
To the floor of the darkening seas
I loved you; I went back to my room
To wait until you came.
Turning from the hearth, I met
A gaze of greengold flame.
And the kiss of your mouth--I saw you smile
As the fire leapt in the grate--
Then all my body's length along
I felt your living weight.
Endlessly onto our bed
We fell through the ebbing night
And slept until my window curtains
Shook with gusts of light.
Your eyes still closed, you held me in sleep
Smiling, unaware.
I swore my love. And felt your hands
Tremble in my hair.
So swore the netted mackerel
And felt the haul-ropes pull
So swore in the hair of the hurricane
The blind and baffled gull.
ii
Cold end of night where the smoky light
Whirls on the tide-ribbed sand. . .
Above the mist a gull's faint crying
Confounds the sea and land.
I stood by the tangled drift-nets;
The bride-bells searched me down
Uncoiling through the silver mist
Their long, uneven sound.
The thin tide pleated at my heels
My hair blew in the spray--
When driftwood bumped my legs, I turned.
My eyes were cold and grey.
Like seaglass as they say, that shows
No light or time of day,
Night's weather kept me for a time
Where memory blackened noon;
I roomed above the shrunken tides
Beneath an iron moon.
For our waters winter in the northern
Dusk in a glittering ring
Which when they melt run south to swell
The terrible tides of spring
To the marshes, the hills, the highest houses
Where night winds cry and toss. . .
In the night, love, does your wife lament?
Or is she at its end content,
Unwary of her loss?
There were mornings I would not comb
My hair, because of the places
Your kisses had touched it. Time lacked, I knew:
I lived on such light traces.
Master of marshes, of the pale rimmed
Sea-border and violent gulf
Of the ocean meadows beyond, and of
My village, and myself--
The carved seagate is white with ice
And lifts for us no more;
Now dolphins stitch the silver wave
Fast to the darkened shore.
Where the boatman, though the flood is in
Stands leaning on his oar.
Third Place - Worth Long
SAFARI
COME with me
on a safari
into the teeming
jungle darkness
of a black soul
searching jor
itself
trek with me
thru these vast
congos
arkansas alabama
mississippi
can you follow me
DEALER
SIGN in a
mississippi
junkyard
we
buy
burnt
bodies
SINNER MAN
A big man
God
with a big stick
Death
tought me how
to pray
RESTITUTION
GIVE me my chance
not dreams not hope
but land for bread
to fill my emptiness
and i shall live
and grow
and try
without the land
we die
MOON MAKER
DON'T pity me
because my skin
is black
i weaved the
moon
and taught it
how to fly
and lit the
sun
and hung it
in the sky
to pity you
STRANGE LOVE
A dark cloud
hovers over
my picnic
ground
TEARS OF DARKNESS
ALONE
in my
lonely room
dark raindrops
fall
and bathe
this wretched
hemisphere
with caustic
tenderness
NIGHT*
NO walls
no ceiling
no roof
no floor
no door
*
QUESTION
WHERE am i
in our
history books
i built the
ark that
saved you
from the sun
and nursed
your babes
with black
milk laughter
everywhere
so where
am i
oh where
am i
ANSWER
THERE i am
behind the plow
laughing
crying
dying
there am i
BLACK MAJESTY
A no named nothing
all unknown
walks this earth
with me alone
is it santa claus
Black i; could be
holy trinity
black i: hardly
destiny
black i: maybe
or is it me
black i: well i'll be
Mel
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