Saturday, June 8, 2013

 
  CHAPPED HANDS
 In Memory of My Mother
Doris Louise Blackman Merriam
 
My mother had chapped hands
Every winter
From doing the laundry
For nine
At some point in her life
An innovation came along
The Easy washer and wringer
Which helped immensely
But she had to hang out
All that cloth
Between porch and barn
On sunny days in winter
In the freezing cold
When we were old enough
We would trudge over
Pacific Street hill to Skim’s store
With a note for groceries
To keep all the human engines
Of 72 Mechanic Street going
Of course, now I feel guilty
For stealing an occasional quarter
From the lunch money for the movies
But I’m so grateful
To both mother and father
Using so much effort
To keep us alive and flourishing
Here in one of the most
Beautiful spots on earth and ocean
No matter the cost to  mother’s
Beautiful hands
 
Kendall Merriam,  Home, May 9, 2013 10:52 AM
Listening to Phyllis dressing
 
MEMORIAL MOON
 
                             For Kristen
 
                   I don’t want to talk
                   About soldiers
                   Though I was one
                   No cannons
                   No fireworks
                   Just this single lantern
                   Tied to God’s finger
                   Which he moves around
                   Like a celestial yo-yo                
                   Low and shining
                   Water calm
                    Almost a silent affection
                   Do you think our poems
                   Will be forgotten
                   I keep running into people
                   Who say they love the moon
                   But if that is true
                   Why aren’t
                   A thousand editions
                   Demanded
                   Across the world
                   Now frail clouds
                   Over the Mussel Ridges
                   Obscuring our friend slightly
                   But good to see again
                   A sign we are alive
                   And loving the earth
                   From mountain top to sea’s breaches
 
                   Kendall Merriam, Home 5/26/13  10:57 PM
                   Listening to a distant television
 
THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS
 
For my brother Robert
 
At the hall of the Grand Army of the Republic
where a bank sits now
each Memorial Day
there was oratorical splendor
veterans, politicians
but the most important was the delivery
of the Gettysburg Address
by a high school senior
one year my brother, Robert
was chosen
I do not remember him having
a loud voice around the house
but he was president of his class
small, slight
commanding some spirit
more than the Baptist Church
prepared him for
that May day was warm and sunny
a fair sized crowd
gathered around the porch of the G.A.R.
I don’t remember any loudspeaker
traffic was light on the holiday
so when my brother
recited Lincoln’s Holy Words
all could hear
there were tears
from local citizens
knowing how many from Rockland
shed blood in that national catastrophe
I am a sometime war poet
who cannot bring myself to read much
about those bloody fields
on the borderlands
it certainly was no “Civil” war
many still celebrate it
North and South
why did God demand so much
to bring freedom to the oppressed
African-American citizens
it is beyond comprehension
fields were littered with
bodies of men and horses
Traveler indeed!
what were the bands of superiority
that challenged humans and humaneness
even though Maine
contributed more men
proportionately
it is only now
lovely faces are arriving in Rockland                
enriching this tiny city
how fortunate we are finally
to hear the fruition of that paragraph
my brother spoke so many years ago
 
Kendall Merriam Home   May 5, 2013  10:37 PM
Listening to the “Best of the Gypsy Kings”
 
THE LEGACY
                   For Marshall and Danny Merriam
 
                   Gray seas today, boding rain
                   Maybe an Easterly
                   No worry in the lobster yacht
                   No worry on the 900 footer
                   In the Gulf
                   Ships bring father and son together
                   A trade ancient and new
                   Not many now under the American flag
                   The work is fraught with danger
                   A loose tripod just down the street
                   The fire of drilling
                   Every precaution is taken
                   Much of the sea year is pleasant
                   Except when it isn’t
                   Poseidon demands much from Odysseus
                   Up to the days of sea horses
                   Who do the work of keeping our
                   Expanding population
                   Fed and fueled
                   Spray gives the salt of longevity
                   So many losses out of Rockland
                   Ships and schooners, johnny wood boats
                   But father and son
                   Have no hesitation
                   In going out
                   Calling on family need, personal need
                   We say silent prayers
                   At each gust on a blowy day
                   We also offer pleas
                   For wood, plastic, steel
                   That each hull hold, each engine
                   Drive the prop properly
                   We cannot abide losses
                   Of any rank, by any wind
                   The music of wind and wave is so enticing
                   We hear it here at the Head of the Bay
                   Where the father was inundated
                   With the thirst of plowing the waters
                   And now the son rides a ship
                   Of giant size trying to find oil
                   We trust they are protected
                   For a long maritime life
                   Braving the oceans for centuries
 
                   Kendall Merriam,  Home, May 19, 2013  4:05 PM
                   Listening to a CD by Dramtreeo  “Waterside”
                   And a compilation of world music by Rebecca Hill
 
THE ROSE
                              For Meg
 
                   She works on her knees
                   Trimming, weeding, adding
                   Flowers to the landscape
                   Of her husband’ s long love
                   Of the sea
                   She represents all the wives
                   Waiting for ships and schooners
                   To round Owls Head Light
                   In a fair breeze
                   Vessels with a paying cargo
                   She never mentions it
                   She just prays
                   That the Captain and all his men
                   Are safe and hearty
                   After facing all the seas’s
                   Mysterious Gods and Goddesses
                   Who work by whim
                   She holds tight to earth
                   Caring for a row of roses
                   That give courage and beauty
                   No hat but her
                   Golden crown of sea gold
                   Brought from
                   Madagascar or Ceylon
                   How the brilliant sky and ocean
                   Match her will
                   For caressing the earth
                   On this day
                   With a hint of summer
                   Edged by an afternoon Southwest
                   That comes nearly every day
                   It tangles her hair
                   A breeze off the harbor
                   Where so many ships were built
                   Sailed and returned
                   When not caught by storm, sleet, fog
                   Can the scent of roses
                   Guide all boats into port
                   As much a lifesaver
                   As any horn or light
                   Is that why she works so hard
                   To please men and God
                   Who walk dangerous and beautiful waters
 
                   Kendall Merriam, Home,   May 16, 2013 1:37  PM
                   Listening to the Allman Brothers
 

 
 
 
 
 

 
 


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