|
Poems by Anne Fitzgerald
El Velorio
I travel easily between my different worlds, slip soundlessly to the edge of the table, slide into the rough-hewed chair, I blink, owl-like, at the soft tawny faces gathered to grieve,
their silver strands of Spanish, I am surprised by the sprinkles of laughter that follow so many tears. Little brown faces peek from behind their Tias as they whimper for cookies.
One meal blends into another: refried beans, barbacoas, calabacitas set out to cool, mountains of warmed tortillas and for the children, big Red.
The men disappear with their beers to watch football in a back room. The women, a coven in the kitchen, stay, tell stories of births, deaths, and their least favorite cousin.
When it is time for me to leave, they pull me close, kiss crucifixes that once belonged to their mothers, and ward off evil spirits with Spanish prayers. They caution me to eat more.
The women return to the kitchen to light candles and prepare more food while the street dogs chase my car, barking. They snap and snarl at the tires as gravel beats the car frame to the paved road.
as featured in Comstock Review, vol. 17, #2
Chair Bound
I once flew with eagles and swam the seas, ran in the forest chased the deer.
I once made love for hours with women who trembled beneath. Warm kisses like melting butter.
I once had nothing but tomorrows. Drank beer pissed in the wind.
Now I can't turn over Nor raise my head or greet the day without wishing I was dead.
as featured in Artifacts
Some notes on the poet: Anne Fitzgerald is a nurse, diver, thespian, poet and painter, not always in that order. Besides the poems above, her work has also appeared in the anthology Touched by Adoption.
|