Showing posts with label Mark Weiss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Weiss. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Mark Weiss

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"Harvest"

In my last New England autumn I played the odds
the night first frost was called for and left
the rest of the tomatoes
unharvested. They survived
somehow, bright summery red
against the firs and grass
in the waning light of my garden clearing,
swamp-maples in the streambed
maples beside it
and the vivid undergrowth in the pine-duff
flaming their various golds and purples.
When I finally plucked them
at the last moment before hard frost, they made a sauce
to last the winter. Now,
in this season of death, my first such,
my father dead, and Bill, and Richard,
I make the yearly sauce across the continent, where nothing
as dangerous as autumn
seems to happen. I think to make
an emblem of that last
harvest before winter,
as if my father and Richard
had not strangled on their own fluids
and lovely, curious and fastidious Bill,
whose presence itself could heal the wounds of childhood,
had not turned hideous in the act of dying.

— Mark Weiss —

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Mark Weiss



AMTRACK, HEADING NORTH

Slow train through the wastes,
scrubby fields bordered with junkyards.


Berry-bushes, orange grasses,
a hill with a broadcast tower.


An elegant gate,
unhinged,
that must once
have been an entry.


Rusty. Rusty metal.
Rusty grasses.


A duck, and its wake.

Nacreous water under sudden clouds.

A tumult of clouds toward sundown.
a sky-battle westward.


These trees that will die in water.


Gray building against a gray sky, but in
the sky a glow of light,
a hope of weather. The building
a slaughter house.


And the river broadens toward bay-water.

The bay. Marshlands.


Now, quilted cumulus, tremendous and close.
A dead tree
points as if shrieking.

Clouds
eating and spewing light. The town
a toy beneath them. The ground could
open, but the sky?


Across the aisle a girl waves strangely,
palm erect, fingers straight,
hinged at the knuckles. Saying
goodbye. Her mouth and chin wrinkled against tears.


All gray now—on the sound
wavelets.
Its thin reflection keeps pace with the train, and the land
and the water and sky
don't swallow anything.
Even in darkness the sky wheels,
the train
moves forward, the sun
west, my body
a society of motion.


Across the way
she sucks at her collar.
Whatever comfort.



© Mark Weiss



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