J. K. Durick, who lives in South
Burlington, VT, is a writing teacher at the Community College of
Vermont and an online writing tutor.
His recent poems have appeared in Pyrokinection,
Record, Yellow Chair Review, Eye on life Magazine, and Haikuniverse.
WWII
They
can show it in color now, divide it
thematically,
begin with parades, the heroic
vanity
of it all, saluting and banners, lines of
perfectly
timed marching, cheering crowds,
speeches,
we see in pantomime mostly, lips
moving,
gestures, pauses, well-orchestrated
masses
saluting, cheering, bringing it on to
themselves;
then invasions and troops moving
into
place, into places cheering crowds wanted,
air
power, navies and tanks, explosions, bullets
then
bodies, piles of bodies, prisoners lined up
marching
off; this was the part all the cheering
crowds,
from episode one, didn’t know came
after,
this black and white of war, the bomb
craters,
the smashed and smoldering building,
gaping
holes in so many lives, so many lost;
we
see them, their faces at war, some smile, even
wave
to the camera, some cry, some just stare
seeing
things very much in the color of their lives
what
they came to; and now the lesson is there for
us,
no longer just in black and white, but in color,
the
color people can make of our pallid world.
Poet
Someone
once asked me what a poem is.
I
said that a poem is what a poet writes.
So
he wisely asked what a poet is, but
the
answer is simple: a poet is a person
who
writes poems. It’s like the chicken
and
the egg, the dancer and the dance,
the
dinner and the dining, the wallet and
the
walrus, the large order and the small.
It’s
one of those wonderful balances we
have
all around us: the quaint and the odd,
the
limber and the lame, the war and the
warrior.
It all matches up somehow, but
there
could be a poet sitting in front of
a
blank page, his poem of the moment,
and
there are poems, I’m sure, out looking
for
a poet, the right size, the perfect fit.
We
all know there are wars out looking
for
warriors; we know the warriors out
there
looking for wars to cook up, like
a
dinner, a large order of wallet, a small
walrus.
We’ve met the lame dancer,
the
quaint dance, and the limber oddity.
Can
anyone tell the poet from the poem?
Well,
let’s hope so.
Words
I
put a word down
On
paper
There
it was
But
it was alone
So
I started to fill
Connect
Piled
words on
Stack
‘em, stored ‘em
Became
a planner
A
builder
Wrote
full lines stretching out across the page like this and then
Some
abrupt
One
liners or
Two
They
began to
Fill
space and time
Some
linked up
Some
fell apart
Some
seemed smart
Others
numb
Some
graceful
And
others, clumsy
They
filled
The
emptiness
Emptiness
in me
And
around me
Made
use of
All
the silence
Drew
pictures
Tried
emotions
Did
the things
I
do
Did
the things
I
wished
Became
an end
In
themselves
One
word to words
To
an end
Like
this.
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