----------2019 Robert Frost Poetry Contest Results-------
First Prize:
"Caterpillar" Author: Arne Weingart , Chicago Ill.
Runners-up:
"I Plan On Haunting" Author: Lucy Ricciardi , Greenwich CT
"Wild Man" Author: Arne Weingart , Chicago Ill
"Loner" Author: Michael Poluzzi, Highland NY
"Full Glow" Author: Linda Flaherty Haltmaier, Andover MA
"Late Harvest" Author: Toni Treadway, Rowley MA
"The Big Room" Author: Mark Bohrer, North Andover MA
"Letter to Hayden:
In the Afterlife" Author: George Drew, Poestenkill NY
"The Suicide Returns
To Leave A Note" Author: Arne Weingart , Chicago Ill
"Uncle Eli" Author: Blanche Jenkins, Detroit MI
You may notice that the same author can appear multiple times.
The scoring is blind and is based on each poem, not the poet.
Thanks to all submitters and readers!
-------------------------------------------------------------
---Arne Weingart
Caterpillar
I send you this photograph of a caterpillarfrom Virginia. He, or she – how would I ever know? –is impossibly fuzzy, perhaps a sign of harsherthan normal winter lurking in the hillswhere they ride horses and hunt deer.The caterpillar has not yet found out that theyare shooting Jews in Pittsburgh, right in the middleof Saturday morning services. They will nothave had the chance to put the Torah awayyet, to wrap it up like a perpetually well-behavedbaby and sing it back to sleep in its velvet-lined ark,or to hear a sermon on how to heal the world,much less to say a prayer for the anniversariesof the deaths of all their dead relatives. Theywon’t be getting around to that this morningin the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh,where Jews go to remind themselves that whateverhappened once can and will happen againand where, if it were an actual tree, caterpillarswill emerge in the spring, dangling from newlygreen leaves, preparing themselves as bestthey can remember how to become somethingthat sheds history like a sad old coat and takes flight.
I plan on haunting
---Lucy Ricciardi
I plan on haunting this house
some time soon or in a few years,
not to be possessive, or to scare
the grandchildren or to settle
scores, and not to make a big deal
of it, but to complete my to do list
in post death thoughts about how
today there was a sound in the house
that wanders like a lost bird. Or
like the rainwater talking garbled
words and swallowing itself.
The new owners will say it’s the wind
in the two pipes set up on our roof
funneling runoff from the chimney
flashing to the gutters, to collect the
efflorescence that would otherwise
stain the shingles, but I will be the wind
in the pipe and the voices in the faucet
and the stubborn film on the roof.
Tell me you don’t hear your mother’s
voice murmelling softly. Of course this
is just a lullaby I’m singing to myself,
assaulted not by the traffic, but the
silence of the suburbs on a Sunday night.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
The Big Room
Or an evening walk in the rhyming universe
-----Mark Bohrer
The evening sky brightens outside, and draws light from my room.
The dogs, impatient at my feet, want to move, let’s leave this tomb.
I laugh, is the workday through? Their leashes on, and mine, undone,
we step into the outer room, now the realm of the setting sun.
It’s eventide, half summer, as we step into the gloaming,
into that room with no ceiling, the three of us go roaming.
Into the warm quiet nightfall, we enter this swirling place.
Leaving our home, my dogs take me on a trip through time and space.
The fading light is stealing, background radiation, fleeing,
new stars and planets are appearing, pearls in a pink champagne sea.
As the swirling sky darkens, what’s left still ignites my brain.
It leaves me with this feeling, our familiar world is strange.
It looks as if I’m standing on the edge of an open field.
It looks like a man with two dogs – instead the infinite, revealed.
I feel the arrow of time, the sky aquiver with twilight.
My hand draws the bow of the Archer, his dart flies across the night.
In this room, my hand can reach to the edge of space and beyond.
From me to that star, I could skip a stone across this pond.
Can my spirit bear the lightness of The All within my reach?
Yet here I am, in the big room, dizzy, with dogs at my feet.
Overhead, there to the right, shines Vega, Mister Sagan’s star.
He had a billion or two to share, but this one was the door.
Twenty-five light years, a short step away, Contact was the book,
where Ms. Foster met her Dad, or an alien with a kindly look.
How can all this be so welcoming? It could squash me like a bug.
But it doesn’t seem so inclined – somehow it feels more like a hug.
A hadron glow still warms the sky, and the worlds around each star.
The radiation might be dangerous, but still, it warms my heart.
Summer solstice, North Andover, Mass.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------
---Arne WeingartWild Man
“New video footage from a drone shows the firstimages of members of an isolated Amazon tribethat had no known contact with the outside world,the Brazilian government said this week.”-- The New York Times, August 23, 2018We see him from above at some distancemoving through a clearing carryingwhat appears to be a spear, we’re not sure.Although the drone cannot have beencompletely silent he does not look upbut moves normally as if this, too, were normal.The drone is not allowed to fly loweror worse, to follow, which would break the rulewe all now understand, which is that weare contagious, that we are a diseasehe and all his tribe will never recover from.First will come canned goods, then medicine,a motor for the back of his canoe,then dresses, shoes and trousers, alcohol,and the worst pathogen, a new alphabetwhereby his language will be parsed intomere linguistics. Walking there below,carrying what appears to be a spear,his life completely strung on sight and soundas though on wire that reaches back centuries,I don’t believe he hasn’t seen or heard us.I think he has a word for what we are,another word for what he now must do.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---Arne WeingartThe Suicide Returns to Leave a Note
This is for your benefit, not mine.Although I can see how you might thinkI felt I left something unsaid at the end.But no. I said what I could say while Iwas still alive. There are some who wonder,maybe you’re one, whether I have regrets,whether, in those first few feet of fall, I hadsecond thoughts. I prefer to no longer speakin metaphors. Nothing is like anything elseanymore. There was a railing, an edge,a leap, a drop, water hard as concrete, finalconsequences. Life, I came to understand,is binary, not some accumulationof missed opportunities and bestintentions, but a switch marked On or Off.I chose Off, never having fully understoodthe On position. Now I know everythingand nothing, which is what all the great mysticsused to brag about. I guess some still do,to ever smaller audiences. Still,I don’t blame you for wanting to know whatmight lie beyond or even in plain sight.The answer, if I could give you one, whichI can’t, might not even apply becauseyour afterward might be different from mine,not having exited by the same door.All I can tell you, which is still not much,is that we try to let bygones be bygones.Think of it like a club where it’s consideredpoor form to bring up bad luck or old money –another metaphor – you’ll have to pardon methe way I pardoned you, not that you wereever guilty of anything other thanwanting to go on living.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
No comments:
Post a Comment