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HABITATS OF CHANGE

Alaskan Poems of Nancy Lethcoe

 

Selections

Waiting for a Public Phone in Whittier

Moving On

A Motionless Turn

Until My Father Calls

To Be, Unperceived

 

 

WAITING FOR THE PUBLIC PHONE IN WHITTIER

 

I wait for the public phone

ahead of me, a man

dressed in white jeans and a T-shirt

speaks in a foreign language

melodious, like a male song sparrow in spring

singing repeatedly from his perch, to someone he loves,

perhaps his mother, wife or lover for

he has paid for the call, keeps paying

with a changing pile of coins, dipping

and bobbing, now a little plover,

now a subtle strutting courtship

with the black change box, and then

he has no more money, his song slows and fades,

he hangs up and walks away, arms dangling, exhausted

and is replaced by two young men - cannery workers, perhaps.

One stands back to me, phone in his left hand,

leaning against the booth, ankles crossed -

socks mismatched - motionless like

a bald eagle perched silently hunting. Only his

friend moves, red socks shifting weight,

hands in red pockets, jiggling change.

The conversation is a whisper

a sweetheart? a father? a parole officer?

It's hard to say. As if he had never been there,

slowly he lifts his wings and silently turns away.

 

Now it's my turn to call and yours to create.

 

 

 

MOVING ON

 

Here, after the Great Earthquake

on overhanging cliffs, immobile

barnacles cling

dead shells affixed beyond the reach of tides, unmourned

for the mourners themselves have perished.

Should I still grieve when my fingers tough the stones

or enjoy

young saxifrage, red stemmed, white heads nodding -

this one brushing my hand?

What do you say when opportunistic plants flourish in rows

of statistics, of footprints, the tracks of consultants

vanish quickly, or

when slowly, the yellow-flowered cinquefoil,

spreads long stolens, young forerunners, across the

beaches, quietly

absorbing, reflecting, cradling sediments, until

tall grasses -

I saw joyful in their bending and flowing -

conceal the runs of meadow mice

and not a single barnacle or cinquefoil

remains? Should we still grieve ourselves

the barnacles and cinquefoil, mice and tall beach grasses?

 

Twenty-five years, to the day

black oil spills across our Sound -

terror awash

beaches wracked with pain

men crying in their sleep -

when Gail speaks more than a pebble hurts her soul;

and the swiftsure answer -

"only individuals died - no species were destroyed."

Tell me, how well have we all sounded each other's grief?

 

Thrust against this cliff

no perfectly ripened blueberries to pluck

I cling, clung weeping

form the permanency of change

rejoicing.

 

Come let us rejoice together.

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A MOTIONLESS TURN

 

Extreme high tide, a deep quiet,

water stalks the cedar boughs;

perched, gulls part the wind.

A sleeping seal surfaces near shore

slowly breathes and sinks

and the tide drifts down

below barnacles and algae, and

the seal breathes again, softly, softly the

water sways, imperceptibly

revealing its veils -

the gulls begin to stir, circling, circling

the cove; a rust-brown weasel feeds

darting, stopping - amongst the boulders,

leaping cracks, disappearing into

the woods and back to the ripples where

small starfish clinging too long to the mussels,

become the prey of now frantic gulls

stirring the water's edge,

grey young - begging, hungry, angry -

hunched and billing, ignored;

an adult plunges its head underwater

and fetches another star

is attacked by the young

learning

 

and then -

the tide makes a motionless turn,

the gulls wheel to the rocks, silent; and the seal

leaves its resting place.

 

 

UNTIL MY FATHER CALLS -

 

I lie, warm, curled in your arms

Knees wedged into knees

The rise and fall of your breathing

Lapping against my ear

My favorite time of day

Until my father calls -

"Come to bed with me, it's been too long,"

And I say, shocked, "No Dad. Remember, I'm your

Daughter. Remember, Mother's gone."

And he looks at me bewildered,

A daughter gone grey?

 

Twenty years, lying in a cold bed,

Hugging a heating pad, alone

Until now missing the trail blazes

My father cries out - "Help!

The bed is on fire," and

Tears off the pillows, the blankets, the sheets

Smothering the flames he too vividly sees

Calling, "Help! help me! my bed is on fire,"

Pulling the cord, breaking the plug

And what can we say to him?

There is no fire.

 

Until my father calls -

"Come to bed with me, I'm cold,

There's frost on the windows and

They took away my heating pad."

And, I say, "I cannot Dad,

I'm colder than you"

Then I snuggle in burying my head.

Until I hear his footsteps

Stop, pause, wandering lost

In a hallway unremembered

And rise to help him back to bed.

"Come, just curl up with me, please,

I won't touch you," he pleads.

Pecking my cheek, and I think,

If you were mother, I'd keep you warm

But you were sonless born

And I turn away saying

"I can't come to bed with you."

 

"Then get me a woman, damm it!"

And just where would I begin?

Look in the yellow pages? Advertise on the radio?

"Wanted a woman to keep my father warm -"

Would I ask for her resume? check her references?

 

Until my father calls -

I lie embraced by your arms again

Warmed on one side by you

chilled on the other

By sorrow.

 

 

TO BE, UNPERCEIVED

We step into skiis, picking our way

kick glide gliding, kick glide gliding

I wish I could say I saw him first

I wish I could say I followed his tracks

I wish I could say I saw his tracks

crouched in the tree, frost-faced, motionless

exposed by summer's fallen leaves

more stolid than snow on the limb -

a marten.

 

Stillness living and silence lying

a burden on more than the tree,

we feel the weight of his watching and

turn kick glide, gliding away

leaving a silent stare

to be -

unperceived.