Ox-Eye Sunflowers
The wildflowers
that grew along the railroad tracks,
dividing the old
celery fields of West Milwaukee
different
flowers grew each summer, purple cone-
flowers, ox-eye
sunflowers, blue lobelia, Jacob’s ladder,
and black-eyed
Susan, their seeds mostly planted by birds
and animals,
wild crazy red, yellow, and orange sunflowers
green stalks and
roots war snaked down through the black
goo creosote
coated railroad ties, home in New Mexico it
was mostly
prickly pear and yucca I’ve seen Van Gogh’s
sunflowers in
Arles, none compare to my beautiful nostalgia.
Licorice And Potato Chips
Autumn stalks
and leaves are dry potato chips,
grape vines are
black and red licorice,
tree branches
reach up like starving children
When you see the
sun, dance hard it will rain,
you can never
love more than one person or
plant, take
small steps and drink lots of water
Stick to Spanish
dagger roots and flowers,
wheat grain and
blanco corn tortillas,
prickly pear
tuna and serrano and poblano,
sip Copper
Canyon sotol and aguardiente.
Leaves In Quebec
Gray black
clouds full of dirt
streaked tears
and blood weep
onto yellow
withered crops
Farmers sob for
their hungry families
they are forced
to leave home to find
work in
factories they scrape and toil
Years mountain
like golden maple
leaves in Quebec
or snowflakes on
a Tucumcari
coyote
The heart is a
prison clock measuring
life and death
Gardens grow and
wilt and make
love to the rain
plants whispering poetry.
CATFISH MCDARIS
CATFISH MCDARIS won the Thelonius
Monk Award in 2015. His work is at the Special Archives Collection at Marquette
University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He is listed in Wikipedia. His ancestors
were related to Wilma Mankiller from the Cherokee Nation. Currently he’s
selling wigs in a dangerous neighborhood in Milwaukee.
No comments :
Post a Comment