can’t feel the rain on their face any morecan’t go to warI pass the stonesone by one in the storm
and when the rain has stopppedthere’s no need to warmin the sunwhat’s done is done
but the rows are alivewith memories. This onetraveled here, this one thereone breathed his lastin Normandy air
whether it’s spring, or rosesdoesn’t mean a thingnone of them is aloneonly me, watching wateron the face of a stone
Larry Keegan
Archive for the ‘Poetry’ Category
WATER ON STONE
Friday, January 27th, 2006STEEPLES
Friday, January 27th, 2006it’s Saturday night and all is wellnobody’s going to heavenand nobody’s going to hell
there’s road rage on the highway600 waiting on death rowfor some the spring is comingfor others – I don’t know
there’s a war that’s killed ten thousandit started because no one said nosome hope it will turn out wellthere were lies, and a command to go
it’s Saturday – people head to churchon Sunday they will say their prayerssteeples make good cell phone antennasmillions bow their headsbut there may be no one upstairs
Larry Keegan
PARKWAY QUEEN
Friday, January 27th, 2006she’s a ninety pound beauty
in a two ton S-U-V
I’ve got to teach her
what the accelerator’s for
she don’t know how to spell it
she don’t know how to use it
honey – it’s a gas pedal!
you got to push it to the floor
just a ninety pound beauty
in a two ton S-U-V
it’s only a quart of milk
she’s goin’ to the store
so what’s that 300 horsepower for?
sittin’ twelve feet above the road
like riding a tank
in Afghanistan
but she can do it
if anybody can
she’s a ninety pound beauty
in a two ton S-U-V
Larry Keegan
BETWEEN STORMS
Sunday, December 14th, 2003we are between storms
in Massachusetts
late February sun
streams through lace curtains
as high noon approaches
we are between storms
in Massachusetts
late February sun
streams through lace curtains
as high noon approaches
Corelli is playing on station 102.5
I taste cashews, almonds, walnuts
and some nuts I cannot name
a sip of Shiraz – ah!
a nibble of Vermont cheddar
and (if you don’t like this
you don’t like my poem)
a chomp of sweet gherkin pickle
we are in between storms
in Massachusetts
late February sun
streams through lace curtains
I am seventy-four
I am happy!
It is high noon!
THE LAST RIDE
Sunday, December 14th, 2003WHEN WINTER COMES
Sunday, December 14th, 2003Somewhat after the holidays
when a white layer of snow
covers the ground, winter
begins for me. I am alone now.
COLUMBINE
Sunday, December 14th, 2003Fair scarlet flower and yellow of sun
memorial of mercy and the primal sweetness
never in man’s soul totally undone,
still waking brightly in the fleetness
of the years; sing gently, gentleness
almost never lost in the wild rocks of fear
cling like hope on hope’s lost precipice
and teach us love is still here.
MAXWELL
Sunday, December 14th, 2003when Maxwell barked
his mistress scolded him
Dachshund type – miniature
when Maxwell barked
his mistress scolded him
Dachshund type – miniature
he growled on June’s last day
Maxwell so unkind to bark at
the stranger passing by
Maxwell’s mistress in such way
favoring the stranger
no bark, no bite. the friendly
flowers of June will hum a tune
neither bark, neither bite
Maxwell sit. Maxwell be kind.
THE SEMINARIAN
Sunday, December 14th, 2003I’m in the dental chair
the assistant with some tenderness
slides the bib about my neck
adjusting it with her fingers
If this was another world -
if things were different -
she’s just about my age
I walk back to the monastery
light snow is falling
there is a clothesline
with panties and a bra
the cups are filling up with snow
it bothers me, but the lady
who owns them does not
seem to care
it is not my calling
to stroke the convex of a breast
but to feel the concave
of the cups – to empty
them of snow -
a lady’s panties – no
they would never fit a man -
these thoughts are out of line
perhaps I will see the Master
of Novices, confess – just in case -
ask the Blessed Virgin for help
and say a rosary.
thoughts from a cell
Sunday, December 14th, 2003you played softball Sunday morning
de-ox-y-rib-o-nu-cle-ic acid
(after all that, I’m not an acid but a salt)
like an old lady’s beads thrown in a purse
I live in a dark nucleus
you walk in the sun around Horn Pond
you played softball Sunday morning
de-ox-y-rib-o-nu-cle-ic acid
(after all that, I’m not an acid but a salt)
like an old lady’s beads thrown in a purse
I live in a dark nucleus
you walk in the sun around Horn Pond
I am polymerase and replicate the ribbon of life
I am an enzyme that reads a section of the code
you smile and talk with a fisherman
I am a protein rolled up from the blueprint
in a segment of the string
I know who you are
you look up and see the morning clouds
the cytoplasm is my home.
I am a membrane
I manufacture ribosomes
that read the orders
and give commands
you read your book
a new thought enters your mind
sugars and carbohydrates, that’s
all we are, like a chain of crystal
six feet long, wrapped in a coil
we hold the numbers
now you are driving your car
I am a million years old
only carbon oxygen and hydrogen
and elements of nitrogen in the plan
we were there when it all began
you scratch your head
you think you’ll write a poem