Friday, September 2, 2022

The Floating Things

 by Brett Rutherford

     after Li Yü, Poem 8

The name of a thing
is not the thing.

A jade tree stands
at courtyard's front,
yet leaves that drop from it
are not hard stones
that can be carved
into dragons and lions.

They say the grass
is strewn with gems
when frost kisses it.
I reach for them
and my wet hand
is none the richer.

"To flower" means
making something new,
yet wilted peonies,
and stiff chrysanthemums
shame the garden,
like crones who came
to beg, and never left.

The moon, they say,
is full again.
Was it not full before?
Is this year's light
that shines from it
a newer thing, or just
the same old radiance,
shed from a tattered robe
in the night sky?

And if a thing's attributes
are not themselves
things in themselves,
moon just moon,
and flowers just flowers,
what thing is Youth
if pulled apart
from years and bodies?

Can Heaven grant us
this thing we most crave:
to age not
and to be young forever?

 

 

Thursday, September 1, 2022

Making Spring Happen

 by Brett Rutherford

after Li Yü, Poem 7

The sound of the little goat-skin drum
makes me want to write poetry.

Fools wait for the falling blossoms
before they say that Spring has come.
To find Spring, you must go early
and walk to the fields in search.
To love a flower that has bloomed
already, is to miss the flowering.

My love presents my favorite cup
with a supple hand. I see
no thumb. The blue-glazed
porcelain surrounds
an inner whiteness, a wine
so pure it has no color.

Is Spring delayed
if we drink and linger?
Does the Forbidden Garden
require the Emperor
to bless its blooming?

Girl, let us drink ourselves silly!
Just as my poem will come
to the beat of a little drum,
the buds and flowers, too,
leaning against the palace,
will listen and follow.

 

Dancing on Autumn Leaves

 by Brett Rutherford

Adapted from Emperor Li Yü, Poem 6

She has come, as I bid her,
to the unruly pavilion
where leaves and fallen petals
carpet her footsteps.

The sun is but three hours up
but still the Lovely One arrives,
a row of sleepy dancers
behind her,
suppressing laughter
as they move to no music,
but to the breeze itself,
the sway of pine branches.

I clap my hands.
She is a little drunk
from last night's merriment.
Her golden hairpin falls
and another must bow
to sweep it up for her.
Not quite so sure
of this step or that,
no tile or square to guide her,

she pretends to smell
an untouched flower,
     and just as well,
     as it is withered.
Fumbling, she tries again,
the wrong foot forward,

while I delight to hear
small feet unsure of step,
on autumn leaves arranged
by Master Wind.

Somewhere a flute and drum
strike up in another palace
(some being called
to early breakfast!)
Not for me, these sounds!
Shuffle, crackle,
slide, and spin,
whirl, little slippers, my
pantomimes of whim!

 

Crybaby

by Brett Rutherford

By the age of six,
I was programmed to cry.
A loud noise would do it.
A father's bruising slap,
most certainly, and so many
that my memory is wiped.

But this I recall,
a war of wills. One slap
on face or bottom
and my mother was rid of me
as I wailed and ran.

One day I read,
in the only book around
about "childish things"
and putting them aside.

So I walked up to her
and said, "Never again.
will you make me cry."

"You little brat! Just like
your father!" Slap! Slap!
I reeled. I bit my lip,
Tears came. I whimpered.

But I did not cry. Not then,
and never after. Self,
sovereign and free, I was.

Big House, Rent Cheap

 by Brett Rutherford

Come right on in.
You can rent the house cheap.
Set back from the road the way it is,
no one will bother you.
School bus picks up right there.
Most folks from hereabouts
keep to themselves. They'll be
no bother to you at all.

Haunted? No. Old Doctor Jones --
or so he called his-self -- he was
the last tenant, but now he's gone
for life to the worst kind of place.

But never you mind about that.
Let's do the tour.
Good porch, good bricks, good stairs,
as you can see, original
from back in the Eighteen-Nineties.
Parlor so wide
you could swing a cat,
sliding glass doors -- not sure
if they still work. Marble!
that's marble on the mantel, yes!

There's just one room
you'll want to stay out of.
The one in back, windows
all boarded up.
There's a funny chair in there,
and all those medicine bottles.
That's where he did the stuff
that got him in trouble.

You'll need your water
for drinking carried in,
just so you know everything.
Some springs near here
are free to fill up from.
You can bathe and wash
with what is here, I guess,
but I wouldn't drink.
The well is tainted.
One time I looked down
with a light and I saw
a lot of rubbish there
and something that seemed,
if you squinted,
like little arms and legs.

You'll be left alone, for sure.
Except some nights
a woman or girl will knock
and will keep on knocking
until she gives up and goes away.
You won't want to answer.

Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Awakening in Early Autumn

 by Brett Rutherford

(Adapted from Emperor Li Yü, Poem 5, to the tune of "Hsi Ch'ian Ying")

As my eyes open,
     the morning moon,
     pale crescent, sets.
Ashes remain;
     the incense smoke is gone.
Cold, too, the coals
     beneath the brazier --
I must wait for my tea.

Calling no one, I rest
     on this pillow and that,
remembering --

Who was I with? what
     was her name?
No matter! Right now
I have a craving
     for the scent of hay.

 Listen!
Off in the sky somewhere,
     swans weakly call.

Above me,
     on the lattice-work
     of cherry, the orioles
          hungry, unsatisfied,
dart off to fuller branches.

Chrysanthemums, those
     drooping dowagers,
          fade and fall.
No one is up. Later,
these garden embarrassments
will vanish, be sure!

Red maple leaves
     and desiccated petals
litter the enameled floor
     and clog the courtyard.

Sweet autumn carpet,
     crispèd and melancholy:
I shall have it left unswept.

I want to watch what
     the feet of dancers
          do to them.

 

At the Door

 by Brett Rutherford

The Mennonite minister,
persistent, soul-saver,
sniffing the unsaved
in our unruly house,
knocks at the door again.
It is his third attempt.

I peer out, as screen
door is the only thing
between me and his
elder-beard eminence.

"Are your parents home?"
he asks dismissively;
no child alone
is worth his trouble.

I am brimful of movies,
Sinbad and flying saucers.
"You see those marks
on the hillside up there?" —

"Yes, boy, what of them?"—

"Those are the tracks
of the Cyclops. It came down
this morning and ate
my mother." — 

"Is your father home, then?" — 

"See that scorch mark
in front of the garage?
That's all that's left
of my father
when the death-ray took him." —

"Now see, here, boy --
to lie is a sin. Besides,
I can hear their voices."

From out the living room
the shouting rises.
"Son of a bitch! Bastard!"
my mother shouts.
"What kind of man — "
"You are my wife!"
he bellows back.
"Son of a bitch! Bastard!"
she yells again.

"Oh, well!" mutters
the bearded Anabaptist.
"I’d best come back
another day."

 

September Sarabande

by Brett Rutherford

It is the night most singular,
alone of all the nights of the year,
when those who were loved
and those who truly loved them,
drift as ghosts in the grim dark.

Night-blooming jasmine smothers them,
as a blue moon makes blind their eyes.
Cruel fate torments them. No fingers
touch as, back to back, they dance
a silent sarabande, eyes to the ground.

The names they whisper, yearning,
are drowned by the night-sky’s wail,
as constellations from their dread
seducers flee, or from the wrath
of jealousy — even stars are denied
the company that most pleases them.

At dawn, they resume their places,
placid and cold beneath the ground,
side-by-side with detested partners,
head-to-foot with dreaded sires.

As burning sun warms up the stones
and the names and vows engraved
upon them, the dance is forgotten.
By name, by date, for all of time,
love’s crucifixion grinds on.

  

La sarabande de septembre

C'est la nuit la plus singulière,
seul de toutes les nuits de l'année,
quand ceux qui étaient aimés
et ceux qui les aimaient vraiment,
dérivent, fantômes dans l'obscurité sinistre.

Le jasmin nocturne les étouffe;
une lune bleue aveugle leurs yeux.
Le destin cruel les tourmente.
Pas de doigts toucher comme,
dos à dos, ils dansent une sarabande
silencieuse, les yeux baissés.

Les noms qu'ils chuchotent, désireux,
sont noyés par les gémissements
du ciel nocturne, tout comme
les constellations lointaines fuient
les ruses d'un séducteur,
ou la colère de jalousie
— même les étoiles sont refusées
les compagnons qui leur plaisent le plus.

A l'aube, ils reprennent leurs places,
placide et froid sous terre,
côte à côte avec des partenaires détestés,
cap à pied avec des parents redoutés.

Alors que le soleil brûlant
réchauffe les pierres
et les noms et vœux qui y sont gravés,
la danse est oubliée.

Par nom, par date, pour toujours,
la crucifixion de l'amour continue.

 

 

Monday, August 29, 2022

Open Stacks

by Brett Rutherford

Does your library
have one too?
A special kind of reader,
I mean. I thought
to ask you, as you maintain,
as we, the open-stack
philosophy that lets our patrons
roam freely from A to Z,
zero to infinity, from LOC
to the dusty old Dewey.

Free-range readers, I call them.
We treasure those visitors
who shun the computer,
turn up their nose at car catalogs.
They want to scan, to touch,
to run their fingers along
the embossed leather spines.
They crave the accident
by which a mis-shelved book
is the very one they need.

But now we have another kind —
do you have one like this?
He, or she, or they, or it,
no taller than a ten-year-old,
began at the farthest shelf
and is day-by-day reading
the whole library. Each book
comes down into a barely
visible hand; the pages flip,
so fast you can hardly see it,
then comes a sigh, and back
the inspected volume goes.

No title goes uninspected;
down on all fours below,
or stretching itself in ladder,
it is studying everything.

One day, consumed
with the thought of a prank
in the works, I walked up
in the shadowy aisle
and touched its shoulder.
"Just what are you about?"
I asked. A light flashed.
I found myself standing
three blocks away,
behind a dumpster.

And so I write to you,
and to a few others
I feel safe to inquire of:
are you invaded, too?
How far has it read?
What happens to us all
when they reach the end
and have yet to find
the reason for our existence?

Awaiting your reply,
I tremble.

Sunday, August 28, 2022

White People

by Brett Rutherford

O whiter than white,
Boccaccio and Rabelais,
Petronius and Shakespeare
all got it right. Centaurs
we are, and not just down-
below. You think you know
your pedigree, but no,
methinks it is not so.

Among the married
Anglo-Saxon women,
Brit and American,
one out of every four
of babies born
are not the child
of the woman's husband.

Smug warrior:
does the pizza boy smile
when he passes you?
What of Fedex and UPS —
that guy-to-guy wink
from the drivers? What
do you think that is about?
And why does Jesus,
the gardener, sing that way?

And if your wife
should take a lover,
why should it be
your fraternity brother,
a golf club life member,
a Harvard club lounger?

Immigrants, you know,
are experts at seduction,
foreplay and extended
ecstasies. Their genes
are desperate to conquer.

And guard as you will
your own palace,
who guarded your mother,
your grandmother, and all
the women of your line?

Most played a jest
in the mating pool.
Most had a favorite child
they bore because
they wanted to.

Roman and Viking,
proud Scot and Norman
invader, Angle of old,
Saxon of German forests,
your line is laid waste
by Italy and Africa,
Spain and Oaxaca.

The bed was battlefield.
Your bored consort
opened the gate
for your welcome
replacement. 

Saturday, August 27, 2022

Choosing No One

 by Brett Rutherford

     after the Chinese of Li Yü, “Yü Lou Ch’un”

The ladies have spent all evening preparing.
Just after the bath, the flesh
of consorts and concubines is white
as snow, with here and there
the blush of peach or cherry.

They all line up in the Spring Palace.
It is all for my benefit.
The phoenix flutes trill plaintively,
to make them long for me,
and me, for them,
water and cloud apart
yet yearning to touch.

As they retire, to await
decision and summoning,
the Rainbow-Dress song
goes the rounds, and fades
as the musicians stop
before each chamber.

Which one has overdone it
and fills the air with the scent
of her alluring powder?
Which one thinks
she has found a love-charm?

The aroma of their desire,
compounded by chemists
with thousand-year perfumes,
is enough to make me dizzy.

In my dark pavilion, I tap
the balustrade. Sometimes I just
pick a number; there are so many!

But then I choose: I tell
the servants to light no lanterns,
to let the red candles flutter out.

The wind is up. My horse
is in high spirits. Tonight
I will ride, and we
shall tread the moonbeams!

Autumn Day-Dreams

 by Brett Rutherford

     from the Chinese of Li Yü, “Wang Kian Nan” (Poem 3)

When, of an afternoon, I nap
before my tea at four o’clock,
I dream of forests further south
where Fall lights up the hills;

of yellow, brown bands a thousand miles
long, a vast brush-stroke across
the rivers and mountain gorges;
of all the red of maples touched by frost.

Night falls.
Among the reeds, a boat,
abandoned, sits idle,
with drooping sail,
and from above,
a figure barely seen
lifts up his flute
on a moon-crowned terrace,

a song for no one
in particular.

Nocturne

by Brett Rutherford

Wordless, he came.
No knock, no bell,
no warning phone call.
The door just opened,
and there he stood.

Weary he was
from long traveling.
A backpack, overstuffed,
dropped to the floor.

As I said, "Welcome!
So many years!
Sit down for tea!"
he sat.

And tea was made, 
bread torn
by two strong hands,
fruit, yogurt, nuts,
whatever in hand
that required no stove
at three in the morning.

Not much was said.
He had been somewhere
you would not want to go,
and this is where he fled.

"Go back to sleep," he said.
He lay beside me, damp
with the storm he had walked in;
he smelled of ashes, lilac,
apples, and wild cherry.

Asleep, he wept.
He was half over me,
shuddering.
I tasted tears
and the cold rain
still rilled from off
the fringe of blond hair
that covered my face.

He jolted awake.
"I dreamt," he told me,
"and in my dream
I was with you,
and weeping.
And now I wake
and find myself here!"

I traced with one hand
upon his cheek,
the salt line of tears.
His hand stopped me,
covering mine,

as each of us made sure
the other was not
some phantom.

"Oh, stay!" I cried.
"Wake not somewhere
above and beyond
this moment!"

Wordless, he came.
The door just opened.
His backpack, overstuffed,
still sat in the kitchen.

He stayed — he stays.
He is here for keeps, he says.
no matter how many
years ago he died.