Authors: Naomi Shihab Nye
You can't be, says a Palestinian Christian
on the first feast day after Ramadan.
So, half-and-half and half-and-half.
He sells glass. He knows about broken bits,
chips. If you love Jesus you can't love
anyone else. Says he.
At his stall of blue pitchers on the Via Dolorosa,
he's sweeping. The rubbed stones
feel holy. Dusting of powdered sugar
across faces of date-stuffed
mamool
.
This morning we lit the slim white candles
which bend over at the waist by noon.
For once the priests weren't fighting
in the church for the best spots to stand.
As a boy, my father listened to them fight.
This is partly why he prays in no language
but his own. Why I press my lips
to every exception.
A woman opens a windowâhere and here and hereâ
placing a vase of blue flowers
on an orange cloth. I follow her.
She is making a soup from what she had left
in the bowl, the shriveled garlic and bent bean.
She is leaving nothing out.
To close: Fold in small end flaps. Insert Flap A
into Flap B as shown
.
There is a picture to help us.
Also an announcement:
Carton has been opened
.
In case we are stumbling through an afternoon,
have lost our way, or plate and knife confound us.
Once a plastic bag intoned:
There should be a suggestion
of firmness in the cooked macaroni
. Not entirely firm,
not utterly anything, just a
suggestion
.
But I don't want to close the butter box
with the butter in it. Place a single brick
in the pink dish, extra three
stacked in waiting, box discarded.
See how much help we didn't need?
The new slash of road curves up beside five sleeping smokestacks.
Four stand together, one apartâthe lucky or the lonely one, depending.
I'm driving you to school with your blue pants and box of lunch.
I'm combing your hair with my eyes.
They've built fancy houses around a giant pit. What do people see in it?
The smokestacks were smoking when I was in college, when my father
drove me down the old road on the other side.
Was it neat? We both know smoke isn't neat but I guess
what you mean. Was it black or white? I can't recall.
So much has poured out the top of my head.
I knew the lady who owned the smokestacks, her peacock
bit my hand. We take turns imagining what happens next,
if they stand or fall, whether the wrecked warehouse
with arches will be spared, or the fog lift, or the sun.
Today a small red light glitters at the throat of the lucky one.
You call it a good sign. At school your friends wear puffy coats
bright as parrots. You fly into your teacher's arms.
I could even hug a dull-looking father in his necktie
as we roll out of the lot into our daily lives. When I pass
the smokestacks again, their firm ladders
and proud ALAMO lettering up the sides, I'm fiddling
with the radio dial, swinging into a lane of cars.
Now the gloom of distant news washes over worse than grit
and we can't clean it, fix it, or make good sense.
Still we hold our mouths wide open, and the birds,
the sky, the trees, and the river
fly into us as if anything could heal. Somewhere deep,
these years must be churning the way cement does
inside a truck. The cement those smokestacks helped to makeâ
it became sidewalks all over this city. It became
buildings and tunnels and walls. We don't think of it gleaming.
Even the highway I drive on.
He grows used to the sound of the floor
Not yet     Not yet
     each evening
right before the news comes on.
Then the killing and the stabbing
and the beating and the crashing.
Turn it off. There's a smudge on the wall,
a Jesus with a blazing heart.
His coffee cup waits
upside down on its plate.
The shape of dinner tastes upside down.
He eats whatever the nurse-lady left him,
the hamburger in its three-day shirt.
Sometimes he doesn't know the name
of what he eats.
He hauls his body to the porch,
sinks his eyes into the weeds.
A hose curls in the lilies.
If he could reach it,
make it down
those three crooked steps . . .
When his wife died he was very quiet
for one day. Then he smiled
and smiled with his two teeth
for the bad time they had
that was over.
His tongue could sound
Soledad
or
Solamente
for his bones and his blood and his few good hairs.
When the drop of water on the white sink
meets the next drop and they are joining,
he thinks of other ways to spend this life
that he didn't do. He would like to meet them.
One by one
the old people
of our neighborhood
are going up
into the air
their yards
still wear
small white narcissus
sweetening winter
their stones
glisten
under the sun
but one by one
we are losing
their housecoats
their formal phrasings
their cupcakes
When I string their names
on the long cord
when I think how
there is almost no one left
who remembers
what stood in that
brushy spot
ninety years ago
when I pass their yards
and the bare peach tree
bends a little
when I see their rusted chairs
sitting in the same spots
what will be forgotten
falls over me
like the sky
over our whole neighborhood
or the time my plane
circled high above our street
the roof of our house
dotting the tiniest
“i”
She's walking up the street from Sanitary Tortilla
with her pink mesh shopping bag.
Mrs. Esquivel of the waving plants,
front porch lined with leaves.
In softer light she dances with sheets.
She came here from the old days.
Slipped out of the old days like a feather.
Floated here with her aluminum pot lids
and blue enamel spoons tied to her wings.
Fanning the heat away with an apron,
ruffled rickrack edge.
She believed in the screen door,
its tiny holes letting in breeze.
She preceded thieves and reasons for locking.
She held on to all her paper fans.
Her
¿Como estas?
has a heart in it.
If I said
No good
, she would listen.
*
Honey how's the little one? I see him come out
on the porch in his red shirt
,
pick up the hose, shoot it straight
in the air at the bananas
.
You got any ripe yet?
I walk over to see the President of the United States
at the Alamo and he don't look like much
.
He stand up high on a little stage and look down
into our faces. He got that tight look
like the curly-tail dog sit in the middle
of the street every night when the lamps
go on. Why you think it do that?
I say, Hey! Hey you! Trucks!
And it turn its head, look at me
so up and down like I'm the one
who crazy
.
*
Sometimes the grass grows so tall
in the vacant lot beside her house.
Fancy pink vines tie knots
around the heads of weeds.
She swims through the field at sundown,
calling out to hens, cats, whoever
might be lost in there,
Hey! Hey you! It's time to come home!
And the people drifting slowly past
in the slim envelope of light
answer softly,
Here I am
.