Lots of people I haven’t understood in this lifetime—
& I haven’t seen olive trees gesturing in breezes
overlooking the Mediterranean like evacuees from Bullfinch
except unmoving—the people I haven’t
understood in this lifetime but loved—& holding my hand a few
inches over the sauté pan I can tell the oil’s ready for the
garlic Eberle grew in the two rows she harvests in June—because the
people I loved I haven’t understood, I was busy thinking
about them—lightly browned, the garlic’s set aside, & chopped morels
our friends left for us added now with ground pepper—of all the
people I haven’t understood & have said I loved
—as the mushrooms wilt & soak up oil—
I haven’t walked where the forest burnt last summer, that’s
where the morels have sprouted amongst the blackened
lodgepole pine—of all the people I’ve loved
nearly the best & almost the worst & not
understood for a minute—& Eberle’s pensive in her garden
picking the spring mix—a simple balsamic dressing—of
all the people I haven’t understood & wanted to—
the chopped Kalamatas add lots of salt—about two dozen—&
the pine nuts & the oregano I never measure—
& Dani says, “I wouldn't wish writing poetry on anyone"—
tho there’s nothing else just now—keep the water at
a simmer so it’s ready for the pasta & it’s time
now—of all the people I haven’t loved well—a
guitar song I wrote for Eberle after a quarrel—the lonesome
train tracks leading everywhere past the Russian Olive groves including
Los Angeles—on the guitar she gave me like
love itself she gave me—of all the people I’ve loved yes I’ve loved
some of them like a guitar perhaps—salting the water—
& there’s another language amongst people who love
& a language to speak about it—talking all night like an
alleluia like a mandocello—
the people I haven’t understood—the pasta’s drained &
tossed—this is so far the hardest poem
before the next poem in this lifetime
Jack Hayes
© 2010
Beautiful. I like how you weave your thoughts in with the actions of making the pasta alleluia.
ReplyDeleteThanks Raquelle--so glad you liked it--& thanks so much for continuing to support these poems & this blog.
ReplyDeleteThere's a wistfulness and yearning threaded through this commentary that gives the poem almost the air of a gentle lament. I like too the sense of villanelle in the recurring pondering of the lost loved and misunderstood. A lovely piece, John.
ReplyDeleteHi Dick: Sorry to be late in responding. It's odd--I was really quite happy in some ways when I wrote this, but there was a definite underlying sadness--the wistful lament part is right. Thanks--so glad you liked it.
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