Saturday, February 26, 2011

For Ben Hiatt


By Guest Poet A.D. Winans

Like a hummingbird feasting on
the pollen of life
You walked the streets like a Samurai
With words sharp as a sword

 

You lived your life like a chess master
Found peace in the mountains
But never forgot the life blood
Of the city

Ravaged by illness, you cut through
The pain with the precision 
Of a surgeon’s scalpel
Your spirit left behind
In the grass in the leaves
In the sky

Your words soft as feathers
Rode life to the end of the line
With metaphors that serenaded
The mind
Your memory dances with the wind
Becomes one with the stars
In a new place a new terrain

In the Buddha temple of life
All things die
But only the flesh expires
The spirit cannot be killed
Lives on in the heartbeat of the sun
In the words and friends who wait
To become one

© 2011 by A.D. Winans
All Rights Reserved

Photo Credits: Hummingbird © Larry Keller | Dreamstime.com and Samurai Grabbing Sword © Sean Pavone | Dreamstime.com

About Ben Hiatt (1943-2007)

Ben was a well-known Northern California poet, a larger-than-life character and one of the many people whose talent and passion for poetry provided a model for me in my early days as a poet. Learn more about him on Rattlesnake Press and on this tribute on Sacramento Poetry Center's blog.

Thanks to A.D. Winans, for permission to print this poem about his long-time fellow poet in honor of the upcoming publication of Ben's last manuscript in Primal Urge, including testimonials. Watch for it.



Sunday, February 6, 2011

Great-Auntie Earth

You look so hunched and frail,
yet you have the strength 
to push a hundred.

You thought I was lost—
never met me 
beyond my mother’s belly—
but when I found all of you so many years later,
Your eyes danced love and sparkled recognition.

You were the link to all my good.

When they wouldn’t have understood, 
you took us in.

Your kindness imprinted me for the rest of my life.
Your influence was stronger 
than the word illegitimate.

“You’re the most generous woman I know,” 
my husband tells me.
No wonder.
Look at where I come from
how you welcomed me
and taught me
in utero
when I was still forming
to have an open heart.

Now we sit vigil while you make up your mind
to stay or to go—to cross worlds.
You’re an elf, but also an old Hungarian plough woman
muttering rosary prayers as she cuts through
the thickness of earth with all her might.

You are most God-fearing, but also the most God-loving,
woman I have ever known.
You blend fragile spirit with stubborn strength:
the kind it takes to push earth in its many forms,
and to keep on keeping on,
as we will keep on loving you,
pushing earth like you taught us well
with total generosity of spirit.

© 1999 - 2011 by Joyce Mason
All Rights Reserved
joycemason.com

~~~

Photo Credit: © Oksana Belodarova | Dreamstime.com