
Further poems online by Derek Webster: www.nerve.com www.nerve.com Agni La Petite Zine Slope _______ Derek is the Canadian Editor at www.slope.org _______ For more Poetry | Derek Webster
The Catamaran
Mauve and sapphire, ruby-orange, emerald-blue, Dragonflies shimmer and hum in the pines.
Ineffable steel, webs cut the body, The spider’s bite, straight to the eye—
Eye which swivels, then shivers, as the body curls. Wrapped bodies twirl in the pines.
Cold swims, card games, nonsense verse. The evenings and days turn usual.
The young woman goes back to bed after breakfast, Her lover does the dishes to start eating again.
Pupae burst, scale the rock-faces, Translucent Recluse leave holes in the wood
To hang from former selves, Spinnakers and wings. Lull finds
The catamaran, its sails and fuselage. Design’s emptiness in the pause.
Study of My Left Hand after Dishwashing
Lines trace lines. A maze churns the thumb. Magnified: burial runes, a starred sky—
Comparing hands, early man Could lift his face, mesmerized.
A hand is still a hand. Open, close, hold, caress. Take mine.
The Sociologist’s Study
Reading the national best-seller Why We Lock
Our Doors at Night; reading The surveyed parties’ answer,
Black and white,
Life would be better If Man found his country’s roots;
In place of rushing to, fro, Tended tomatoes, his neighbors thoughts—
I faltered;
And withdrew to Stare at the houses across,
And upwards wondered Where were the stars.
Anne Street
I met a heart Walking down Anne Street And it gave me a pamphlet That said “Give generously.”
Across the highway, Baroque red, poised houses— I was lost, Anne Street found me.
Factories closing, long ago. A hill gently lowering. The trees humor-sized, leading To the riverbank.
The sidewalks ache. The hydrants wait. Underneath, water moves Through pipes with salmon gills.
The young couples move back At night, undress as they unpack. Trees fruit, the fruit falls unpicked, Rains come, unstain the sidewalk.
The Cedarfield Retirement Community
Bridge, lemon tea, and talk of tours in the war. Not musty, more sterile— a hospital elevator. Muted trombones play Thirties tunes. Empire chairs and still lifes dot the halls to the dining room. Chef cuts lamb any night.
Two more certainties, Nurses and a doctor, sleep on-site. Try to focus on the eyes, a child’s first devotion. Love and history our only ways out. My grandfather’s grandfather is still riding home, two weeks on a southbound mule, from Pickett’s Charge—
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