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    Her Life Is On This Table and Other Poems

    Page 8
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    handkerchief

      And walk from now on in confirmed non-belief.

      August 30, 2013

      Old Ben Cline

      Ol’ Ben Cline, as bold as you please

      Strolled past my house today

      As usual, at noon, and blowin’ a tune

      Just a grinnin’ and whistlin’ away

      Like life is all fair, and he don’t have a care

      Yet his jacket and shirt are still frayed

      At collar and cuff, and boots all scuffed

      From his years walkin’ streets and byways

      That whistlin’ — Lord how it fractures my nerves!

      Them old tunes that I used to know

      And each one pullin’ some dead memory

      Like a horse-drawn hearse passin’ slow

      Bright little songs from smilin’ old days

      When life was so sweet on the tongue

      ’Bout old mill streams and flyin’ machines —

      We looked past ourselves when we sung

      But the world grew so dark and went through that arc

      Of war, and depression, and pain

      Our lives went to hell, and there’s no way to tell

      If we’ll ever see bright days again

      But Ben all the while, never loosin’ his smile

      Kept on deliverin’ the mail

      And blowin’ so happy them sappy ol’ songs

      Every day past my house without fail

      I’d holler, “Pipe down! There’s people aroun’

      Don’t like hearin’ notes that sour!”

      He’d smile and wave hi, whistle on by

      And return the next day on the hour

      I ’member sayin’ “Someday we’ll be prayin’

      Your soul to its heavenly rest

      But I’ll see your lips cold and quiet at last

      And feel like my life has been blessed.”

      So wouldn’t you say that it should be that way?

      Souls rise when death sets ’em free

      So please tell me why, six years in his grave

      That man just will not let me be

      September 9, 2013

      A Meeting in the Woods

      I walked today

      a cold long way

      by wooded path

      I knew of old.

      Her voice was there

      in lingering air,

      an echo forest

      limbs enfold.

      I’d hoped to find

      a quiet mind,

      but paid instead

      love’s bitter cost.

      Where she once walked,

      where we once talked,

      I felt too keenly

      all I’d lost.

      While cold, frustrated,

      feeling fated

      to be love’s

      sad orphan child,

      I heard nearby

      a sudden cry —

      almost a scream —

      one strained and wild.

      Off to my right

      in obscure light

      a figure slight

      amongst the trees.

      Sobs overcame

      her weakened frame

      and she collapsed

      down to her knees.

      Her pain-filled eyes

      whetted her cries

      to such an edge

      they cut my soul.

      My own despair

      was echoed there;

      we were a pair,

      and neither whole.

      Had she, too, played

      with love’s sharp blade

      till wounds were made

      by lover’s hand?

      From opened vein

      to bleed out pain

      till what remained

      one could command?

      What then? To go?

      To leave her so?

      Like me, brought low

      by heart bereft?

      Mere courtesy

      commanded me

      to turn and seek

      the path I’d left.

      My wont had been

      to shut grief in.

      But had I found

      an hour’s release?

      Perhaps if bared,

      by two hearts shared,

      torments might ease,

      if not surcease.

      I drew nearby

      to offer my

      assistance to her

      in her plight;

      held out my hand

      to help her stand,

      and said some words

      inane and light.

      “Don’t think me rude

      if I intrude,

      but we should go now,

      both of us.

      “Dark clouds hang low

      above this show.

      They’ll soon make tears

      superfluous.”

      Dried by her sleeve

      her eyes perceived

      clear sight of me

      and weren’t amused.

      And when she spoke

      her voice was choked

      and angry, if

      a bit confused.

      “Seeing me here,

      was it not clear

      I sought no stranger’s

      company?

      “What do you gain

      to see my pain?

      Why seek you to

      make sport of me?”

      “Apologies

      if I’ve displeased.

      These paths to me

      are quite well known.

      “From time to time

      I find that I’m

      drawn back, that I

      might walk alone.

      “I, too, seek ease

      ’midst silent trees,

      to vent some grief

      where none intrude.”

      Some mollified,

      she then replied,

      “Then both of us

      seek solitude.

      “You go your way,

      and I will stay —”

      “— What then? To drown

      in nature’s tears?

      “I would suggest

      we find some rest

      and shelter from

      the coming storm.

      “If so you please,

      just past these trees,

      I’ve house and hearth

      might keep us warm.”

      Her face, in flood

      with risen blood,

      now paled somewhat.

      She felt the sting

      of breath of storm

      on her spare form;

      my cloak helped ease

      her shivering.

      Reluctantly

      she gave to me

      her hand and we

      regained the path.

      I hoped she’d see

      sincerity

      in proffered help,

      and cool her wrath.

      As we first walked,

      I little talked;

      she little wished it

      otherwise.

      I formed a plan,

      and so began

      to scorn love and

      provoke replies.

      “Here love is furtive,

      then assertive;

      acted out, and

      rote lines said.

      “The actors’ pay

      is locked away;

      but later opened,

      proves but lead.”

      Though she had, too,

      some cause to rue

      love’s false embrace

      had held her heart,

      yet she averred

      my caustic words

      were ill-considered

      on my part.

      “You castigate

      that which of late

      was treasured while

      it stayed with you.

      “Do gold and gem

      become dross when

      the giver steals

      away from you?”

      I then replied,

      “Love occupies

      a heart like some

      invading force;


      like hungry savage

      ravages,

      then torches all

      as it takes horse.”

      But she deplored

      my metaphor

      for sanguinary

      imagery.

      “Such marshaled force

      is not love’s course;

      we freely give

      it fealty.

      “Without contest

      it makes conquest

      of all who would

      subjected be.”

      “But love, untrue,

      will slice in two

      the bonds owed that

      false suzerain.”

      “Then must we find

      a lord more kind

      and honest, if

      by chance we can.”

      By sidelong look

      which I then took

      I saw physic

      in our exchange:

      her thoughts, diverted,

      had reverted

      to Socratic

      interchange.

      Soon our discourse

      veered from its course

      and other subjects

      were explored.

      My cot was gained

      before it rained;

      a warm hearth brought

      us to accord.

      Now at our ease,

      we dined on cheese,

      some cold meats, and

      uncorked a wine.

      I toasted speech

      that let us reach

      a comfort neither

      hoped to find.

      Our minds, too grave,

      contesting, gave

      their melancholic

      thoughts release.

      Thus do storms vie

      till eye meets eye,

      unwind, and find

      at last some peace.

      The weather broke

      and soon she spoke

      of need to make

      her way back home.

      Her village lay

      not far away

      down that same path

      we’d walked alone.

      The rain, we found,

      had muddied ground,

      so that a stroll

      was deemed unwise.

      And so my chaise

      by steady pace

      soon brought us to

      our last good-byes.

      Though paths divide

      some ghosts abide,

      and memories

      fast hold my heart

      I do confess

      I need redress

      from sore regrets

      that never part.

      This memory

      is haunting me:

      her rose lips part

      to sip port wine;

      are parrying

      and countering

      every verbal

      thrust of mine.

      Should I pursue her,

      open to her,

      hope my hopes

      in her are found?

      Or hope that she

      comes seeking me?

      Between us lies

      a neutral ground.

      Two weeks, and more,

      I’ve left my door

      to make my way,

      in sun or rain,

      to where we met,

      that fate might let

      her steps one day

      find me again.

      October 20, 2013

      After the Storm

      I stand and see in ocean spray,

      now pearled by the light of dawn,

      a thousand friendly eyes that play,

      and wink at me to urge me on.

      I am the galleon risen from

      the tomb of trough to crest of wave;

      through the blast of storm I've come,

      from a darkness like the grave.

      I see by sextant I have veered

      leagues past measure from my course

      into strange latitudes I feared;

      yet find no cause now for remorse.

      And so I sing of long night’s end.

      and listen to the water’s song;

      though I had not an ear to lend,

      these seas have called me all along.

      From gulls that float above the mast

      discordant notes are sweetly voicing

      words that I can hear at last:

      “We one and all share your rejoicing!”

      October 22, 2013

      About the Author

      Daniel Daugherty and his wife Jo Ann are Ohio natives who have been living in Colorado for more than forty years with their children and grandchildren, all Colorado natives. He is a retired electronics technician who has been writing poetry (rather fitfully) for the last twenty-five years.

     



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