Monday, May 30, 2016

Chipmunky Business

Truth be told, during my acting/theater career, I really once played a chipmunk. The play was 'How to Succeed in Business..." and I was the guy who came out and shouted "Chipmunk Rah! Chipmunk Rah! Gooooo Chipminks!" and then jumped around like a cheerleader spaz. It was a real part!
Which has nothing to do with this;
 

Chipmunky Business

Chattering the Chipmunk is a ventriloquist,
Rudely alarming at the sight
  Of me and Mr. Cat on our porch,
He holds his head still
Moving his mouth but a little,
  He convulses his hips
While his tail twitching tweaks,
One would think it’s his rear.
  And not his head
From which he speaks

Quite a help in the garden
Is our little brown fellow,
  With an elephants mind he never forgets
Where I’ve sown the precious forget-me-nots,
So he shows his concern,
  Every time he returns,
By his digging them up once again

"Get out of my pots, you substandard gopher!"
He turns ‘bout and runs from my scorn,
  In a moment or two then
Zig zags back through the lawn
Bearing in his duffled cheeks an acorn,
  Which wisely one would think
He’d set aside in his lair
Against the hard Winter nights,
  And their cold bitter air,
Yet I wonder if he is that smart a player,
For the following Spring
  Comes a most unplanned thing,
It’s a too inch tall sprouting oak tree

Sunday, May 29, 2016

Memorial Day

In addition to the jingo and the pompous marching band, let us never too neglect the pedestrian poetic elegy. 

Memorial Day

Something of a heartache brings Memorial day,
It’s kindly reminder of the kindest thing,
The faith a loving soldier had in mind,
  When he served, and fell, too young in war,
By the menacing grip of foreign hands unkind

Now bring on the jingo! And the marching pompous band!
They play so well meaning, just unable to hold the hand
Of she who knew and loved her soldier so well
  That to this day she can’t remove his wedding band

Now witness the productions staged across our land,
At Arlington, Fort Devens, the Tomb of the Unknown’s,
And the Soldiers Fields, all too well staffed and manned,
As she relives that day when
  The flag served double duty as a shroud,
The bugler wept taps, the Honor Guard favored salute,
And then the folded flag the Officer presented, to her,
  From he, and a grateful nation,
On which she left fresh mourning stars,
More tears upon our thirteen bars

There after, each ensuing year,
This day we rekindle her loss with a callow kindness,
By reveling in the flag-waving valiance for which he bled,
We resurrect that love which ever lives,
  Because she, and we, by our honor decree,
None shall be forgot

Friday, May 20, 2016

Lawn Mowing

Several months ago I wrote this poem thinking about Daido. I may have even posted it here before, but finding this photo I decided it deserves a re-dedication to Bonnie Myotai Traece, who you see here standing here next to Daido and whom you can learn more about by googling "Hermitage Heart Zen."

Lawn Mowing
  (for Bonnie Myotai Traece)

When May winds blow
  on long grasses, bending,
They kow-tow at the waist,
  displaying they have grace,
You’d not have thought them Buddhist

Roshi fires up
  the green Jumping Johnny,
Hitching on the gang mowers
  he cuts them on their knees,
A late Spring mowing prudent

Later, jukai,
The pink shorn novice kneels
  her head bare but for there,
Where he shaves her, as the grasses,
  all the stubble rows the same