Sample Poems by Ann Silsbee


Finding Her Well

This hint of damp, a spring?
Between these mounds of roots, a well?

In this ground dry with needles,
fallen bark, twigs, was there soup,
coffee, water for dishes?

My dowser's tools mosquitoes
straying from the underbrush,
footprints shadowing the dirt,
I delve into the woods'

years of detailed forgetting,
spade until a few stones ring,
until the hole is deep enough
and earth sags in.

This must be it.
But how did she keep the water clear?

I look for stones. All through the woods
shapes lie askew, half buried in dirt,
velveted with moss and lichen, knobbly,
lopsided, sizes I can carry.

I line the hole's dirt walls, pile
stones deep to keep the water free
while it seeps in, swells,
lifts its small black pool.

Ga must have lugged buckets here,
knelt down thirsty on the stones
to catch the water in her hands, thirsty
as I am to know how she lived.

I cup my palms and drink,
taste the sweet, young roots,
as if my grandmother had spoken
from the earth to tell me where to dig.


As If A Message From Ga

Where it first grew none of us know,
but here in my South Hill kitchen

my grandmother's maidenhair fern
buds on as it has for more than a century,

sending small brown spores by secret routes
to colonize my other pots, keeping
its lineage unbroken. These scions

are not the plants she fed and tended,
guiding the slender spout of her watering kettle

to nose among the roots, the dainty leaf-fans
not the ones her fingertips brushed to test for thirst,
nor the same stems, thin and black as message wires-

these roots toe downward in a pot she never
packed with earth. Few molecules she loved

are left, yet light leaks green through the leaves'
feathers, trembles the thread of silver
as it arcs from the copper spout, remembers

the hand that once steadied mine to water
ferns in her south bay window.


Sunday Afternoon On The Ohio

Boats bloom like lilies on the river.
Cirrus sails high in the sky's blue west.

In green canoes human couples leaf the banks
like other river-dwellers, mud- turtles

sunning on snags who lift lazy heads
as they slip by, doves

preening in willow thickets,
cooing in each other's private

feathers. Everywhere pollens
fatten with May. A great blue heron

stretches up the long stick of his neck
like a strange fringed orchid, eyes

the boat nosing into his tall reeds.
He's not afraid of lovers-slow

people who pay no attention
to his hen nesting on a branch

nearby-who put their paddles down,
clamber into the canoe's ribbed

belly, shoulder to chest, hip to hip,
breathe into each other's heart-pods.

 

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