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Authors: Naomi Shihab Nye

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POLLEN

When weeds eat the playhouse

what does that say about the family?

The ball left at the base of the tree

loses its breath shrinking into

a stump or clump of dirt and the mole comes

and the earth drums up into little mounds

nobody kicks. Then what year is it?

Maybe the door to the big house opens and a man comes out.

A woman comes out drying her hands.

Dinner is almost ready but there's no one else

to eat it. Besides the man and the woman.

Maybe only the woman.

Or there's no dinner.

The door to the playhouse stuck open not swinging

and light comes through

replete with pollen of cedar and foxglove

and something else is going to be planted

in the ditch by the road

on the bank of the river but there will not be

a child to tell its story. How will that change the story?

If the fox puts on her lavender gloves just as you shut your eyes.

If in the night something touches your sleeping cheek

and startles you and it is the fox

but you forget to offer her tea in the playhouse

then what year would you be sipping?

What would that say about the person you became?

THE LAST DAY OF AUGUST

A man in a lawn chair

with a book on his lap

realizes pears are falling

from the tree right beside him.

Each makes a round,

full sound in the grass.

Perhaps the stem takes an hour

to loosen and let go.

This man who has recently written words

to his father forty years in the birthing:

I was always afraid of you
.

When would you explode next?

has sudden reverence for the pears.

If a dark bruise rises,

if ants inhabit the juicy crack,

or the body remains firm, unscarred,

remains secret till tomorrow . . .

By then the letter to his father

may be lying open on a table.

We gather pears in baskets, sacks.

What will we do with everything

that has been given us? Ginger pears, pear pies,

fingers weighing flesh.

Which will be perfect under the skin?

It is hard not to love the pile of peelings

growing on the counter next to the knife.

I STILL HAVE EVERYTHING YOU GAVE ME

It is dusty on the edges.

Slightly rotten.

I guard it without thinking.

Focus on it once a year

when I shake it out in the wind.

I do not ache.

I would not trade.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Thanks to the editors of the following journals where some of these poems first appeared:

Alaska Quarterly Review, Atlanta Review, The Atlantic Monthly, Cat's Ear, Chaminade Literary Review, Chili Verde Review, Clackamas Literary Review, Fine Madness, Five Points, Grafitti Rag, Green Mountains Review, Hawai'i Review, Hayden's Ferry Review, Herman Review, Hurakan, Indiana Review, The Kenyon Review, Many Mountains Moving, The New York Times, One Trick Pony, Paragraph, Poetry Kanto (Japan), Rain City Review, Rio Grande Review, Solo, Tampa Review, ¡TEX!, Two Rivers Review
.

Individual poems appeared in the following books:

“Elevator” appeared in
I Feel a Little Jumpy Around You
, edited by Naomi Shihab Nye and Paul B. Janeczko (Simon & Schuster, 1996);

“The Small Vases from Hebron” appeared in
The Best American Poetry 1996
, edited by Adrienne Rich (Scribner, 1996);

“Darling” appeared in
Contemporary American Poetry
, Sixth Edition, edited by A. Poulin, Jr. (Houghton Mifflin, 1996);

“Always Bring a Pencil” appeared in
Minutes of the Lead Pencil Club
, edited by Bill Henderson (Pushcart Press, 1996);

“The Rider” appeared in
The Place My Words Are Looking For
, edited by Paul B. Janeczko (Bradbury Press, 1990);

“My Uncle's Favorite Coffee Shop” appeared in
Written with a Spoon: A Poet's Cookbook
, edited by Nancy Fay and Judith Rafaela Sherman (Asher Publishing, New Mexico, 1995);

“Last Song for the Mend-It Shop” appeared in
Travel Alarm
(a chapbook), (Wings Press, Houston, 1993);

“The Time” appeared in
Invisible
, a chapbook, (Trilobite Press, Denton, 1989).

*

Deep thanks to the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation for their heartening support.

Also I am grateful to Madison, without whom it would be Ticonderoga #1 pencils all the way.

“Listening to Poetry in a Language I Do Not Understand” is for Shuntarō Tanikawa.

“How Far is it to the Land We Left?” is for Aidan Artemus Gurovitsch.

“String” is for Phyllis Theroux.

“F” by Denise Levertov, from
Poems 1968-1972
. Copyright © 1970 by Denise Levertov. Reprinted by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Naomi Shihab Nye lives in San Antonio, Texas. Her recent books include
Habibi
(a novel for teens),
Lullaby Raft
(a picture book) and
Never in a Hurry
(essays). Her books of poems are
Red Suitcase
(BOA) and
Words under the Words: Selected Poems
. She has edited four prize-winning anthologies of poetry for young readers and is a Guggenheim Fellow for 1997–1998.

BOA EDITIONS, LTD.:
AMERICAN POETS CONTINUUM SERIES

Vol. 1

The Fuhrer Bunker: A Cycle of Poems in Progress

 

W. D. Snodgrass

Vol. 2

She

 

M. L. Rosenthal

Vol. 3

Living With Distance

 

Ralph J. Mills, Jr.

Vol. 4

Not Just Any Death

 

Michael Waters

Vol. 5

That Was Then: New and Selected Poems

 

Isabella Gardner

Vol. 6

Things That Happen Where There Aren't Any People

 

William Stafford

Vol. 7

The Bridge of Change: Poems 1974–1980

 

John Logan

Vol. 8

Signatures

 

Joseph Stroud

Vol. 9

People Live Here: Selected Poems 1949–1983

 

Louis Simpson

Vol. 10

Yin

 

Carolyn Kizer

Vol. 11

Duhamel: Ideas of Order in Little Canada

 

Bill Tremblay

Vol. 12

Seeing It Was So

 

Anthony Piccione

Vol. 13

Hyam Plutzik: The Collected Poems

Vol. 14

Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir 1969–1980

 

Lucille Clifton

Vol. 15

Next: New Poems

 

Lucille Clifton

Vol. 16

Roxa: Voices of the Culver Family

 

William B. Patrick

Vol. 17

John Logan: The Collected Poems

Vol. 18

Isabella Gardner: The Collected Poems

Vol. 19

The Sunken Lightship

 

Peter Makuck

Vol. 20

The City in Which I Love You

 

Li-Young Lee

Vol. 21

Quilting: Poems 1987–1990

 

Lucille Clifton

Vol. 22

John Logan: The Collected Fiction

Vol. 23

Shenandoah and Other Verse Plays

 

Delmore Schwartz

Vol. 24

Nobody Lives on Arthur Godfrey Boulevard

 

Gerald Costanzo

Vol. 25

The Book of Names: New and Selected Poems

 

Barton Sutter

Vol. 26

Each in His Season

 

W. D. Snodgrass

Vol. 27

Wordworks: Poems Selected and New

 

Richard Kostelanetz

Vol. 28

What We Carry

 

Dorianne Laux

Vol. 29

Red Suitcase

 

Naomi Shihab Nye

Vol. 30

Song

 

Brigit Pegeen Kelly

Vol. 31

The Fuehrer Bunker: The Complete Cycle

 

W. D. Snodgrass

Vol. 32

For the Kingdom

 

Anthony Piccione

Vol. 33

The Quicken Tree

 

Bill Knott

Vol. 34

These Upraised Hands

 

William B. Patrick

Vol. 35

Crazy Horse in Stillness

 

William Heyen

Vol. 36

Quick, Now, Always

 

Mark Irwin

Vol. 37

I Have Tasted the Apple

 

Mary Crow

Vol. 38

The Terrible Stories

 

Lucille Clifton

Vol. 39

The Heat of Arrivals

 

Ray Gonzalez

Vol. 40

Jimmy & Rita

 

Kim Addonizio

Vol. 41

Green Ash, Red Maple, Black Gum

 

Michael Waters

Vol. 42

Against Distance

 

Peter Makuck

Vol. 43

The Night Path

 

Laurie Kutchins

Vol. 44

Radiography

 

Bruce Bond

Vol. 45

At My Ease: Uncollected Poems of the Fifties and Sixties

 

David Ignatow

Vol. 46

Trillium

 

Richard Foerster

Vol. 47

Fuel

 

Naomi Shihab Nye

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