Monday, December 11, 2017

Sonnet 17 -- The Effort

For Suzy, after buying a new house in Medford.


The effort that’s required to buy a house
is daunting -- first amass a pile of cash,
a bank loan, and the buy-in from your spouse,
then if the market’s tight, go madly dash

to open houses everywhere in town,
ignoring the sage and sound advice --
“Buy low” -- you bid high, but still get turned down
although you bid above the asking price!

But like a pinball bouncing from home to home
that strikes the bonus, you win a jewel
with kitchens and bathrooms of burnished chrome,
a landscaped yard, and an backyard pool,

and there you can float about in style
and make all the effort you’ve spent worthwhile.

Sanctuary

For the Annual Meeting of the East Congregational Church of Milton, June 4, 2017

Brothers and sisters, when we’re upstairs
Singing the hymns and saying our prayers;
have you noticed that there’s peeling
paint chips flaking on the ceiling?

The narthex rug is stained and faded,
the paraments are dull and jaded,
and the light within now has to pass
to us through yellowing Plexiglas.

Beside the altar cross the panels
are sooty now from all the candles
that burned to show God’s presence here
on Sunday mornings for sixty-six years.

Now a sanctuary should inspire
visions of a higher power,
both to those who like to ponder
sermons, and those whose minds wander,

turning their eyes to rise above
the pediment, where the holy dove
looks back down at us in our pews
as we experience God’s good news.

And all or this – the sermon, story,
candles, choir, and offertory – 
are outward signs of an inner grace
that we share together in this sacred space.

So brothers and sisters, let's turn the page
on the musty rugs and the dusty beige,
and join as one to do our duty,
and restore this house of God to beauty.

Saturday, April 29, 2017

Potatoes




In the North, November is the month when cold winds blow,
and strip the trees of golden leaves before the coming snow.
In stony fields the cold earth yields to harvesters its fruits
as digging shares relentlessly tear up the tasty roots.

Then caught up in a system that is larger than themselves,
the spuds are lifted up mechanically to picking shelves,
where Latin girls with glistening curls pluck out each haulm and clod,
like angels who send goats to Hell and spare the sheep for God.

The large and firm are washed and graded US Number One,
then sent off to fine restaurants before the day is done.
The knobby and misshapen are dumped into plastic bins;
they’re second class potatoes, for second class citizens.

Potatoes that are mashed and served with turkey, squash and peas
when once a year we volunteers fix homeless folks a feast;
and all the while we laugh and smile, at jokes and gentle ribbing,
then when we're through, share a brew, our due for virtuous living.

Still let’s be sure to thank these poor, for enriching our Thanksgiving.




Thursday, February 23, 2017

Sonnet 16 - In Praise of Abstract Art



An image of a herd of bison running
from horsemen twenty thousand years ago
is painted on the cave walls at Lascaux --
it clearly shows a hunt, and ancient cunning.

Now artists paint us much more abstract scenes;
a spattering of brilliant cadmium hues
was sold for millions, making headline news;
while making millions wonder what it means.

Yet if out of this wonderment we find
new meanings using our creative urges,
(though what we come up with sometimes diverges
from what the working artist had in mind)

then we who live in anonymity,
while observing art, share creativity.