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Cardinal Points

~ Poetry By Sandra Sidman Larson

Cardinal Points

Category Archives: Gatherings

Recently published (2012) anthology by group of nine Foreword Program participants at the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis, MN

Revelers

18 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Gatherings

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The Atlantis Hotel
Heraklion, Crete

4 am and we can’t sleep.
Greeks have no clock for quiet.
Congregated below our window
a youthful party throwing marbles
at the walls—no—it is actually
the language tossed about—
hard and round—good
for argument and passion.

No use trying to sleep.
We might as well join
the revelers in the street,
roam the town, search
for their forebearers,
catch the energy
of Minoans, Greeks, Venetians,
Turks—all those who actually
started this commotion.

It’s heard above the swollen
waves that pound against
the harbor walls, it ricochets
off narrow cobbled streets,
and, labyrinthine with desire,
follows passage ways
through olive groves,
through the ruins of Knossus,
to the elongated desires of El Greco.
In the puzzle of these places
the skin of history breathes.

African Admonishment

18 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Gatherings, Life Reflections, Uncategorized

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Botswana

You must ask for what you really want
Don’t go back to sleep. Rumi

I
The bushveld is too full to talk about.
Look.

Trees, grasses, savannah, swelling clouds
drifting toward distant herds.

There is the eagle,
the shadow of his wings.

The sound of no shoes walking
in the Kalahari sand.

The leopard saunters by himself
in the Mopane forest. He is not to be seen.

Here the trees are in prayer, birds full
of praise, sky kneeling, and the wind so light.

II
You must spend more time with low-lying wild
marigolds by the side of the trail.

You must be dressed with what’s here. The loose hair
of a beautiful woman doesn’t need to be combed.

You must try to lose yourself,
and stamp a deep memory
of all you love into the earth—

the eyes of the hippo
wallowing just above the surface;

the wrinkled skin and massive ears of the elephants,
cooling great bulk, so awkward but useful;

the bend of the trees
sheltering all; and

the ground hornbills carrying their red pouches
as if filled with their treasures.

III
From another continent, you must figure out
how to be delivered from your own figuring.

Understand you hold no stature in this land but
you must care for it still. Don’t listen to the Gray Lourie
birds with their harsh warning, go away, go away.

If you are quiet enough the grace
of this landscape will follow you home.

What ever can be done must be done.
Love has more courage than reason.

The Forbidden City in the Season of Snow Lion

18 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Gatherings, Uncategorized

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Swept by the wind, the falling snow turns
down streets, blows around cornices
behind the geometry of dynasties
behind the footfall of fallen emperors,

falling gently enough for a man
in a denim work coat and wool hat to sweep
away flakes of snow with a broom.

How often have we brushed away
what we don’t realize will accumulate?
The roof guardians are still
watching but give no report.

Here is the handiwork of thousands:
of stonecutters, carpenters, brick layers
who labored to build and decorate
nine hundred ninety-nine rooms. Almost

as spacious as heaven, although you trip
over entry ways with unobserved sills.
Your guide continues to describe
the treasured scrolls, the gold, the robes,

the porcelain not to be seen—
stored elsewhere for protection.
The plans, schemes, the mascara behind
the fan have no force any more.

You can’t comprehend
what you are forbidden to enter
and something is always missing
from history no matter the length

of your search. And you feel very small,
did they? These doors
of imagination do not open.

And the snow is beginning to fall heavier, now.
 

 

 

On Edge in San Francisco

18 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Gatherings, Life Reflections

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            Lo, the dove returned, bearing in her mouth
an olive leaf plucked off, so Noah knew…

            Genesis 8:11

 A shallow shawl of birds,
refusing to be named, floats
in the eucalyptus-light air.

See them here—these young refugees
from Minnesota, Iowa, Utah,
trying for a brand-new start,
working at the Sphinx Copy store;

sitting in small espresso shops
staring at the onyx surfaces
of their lives, and hungering
or the taste of revelations

as the sun’s slanting rays
create bright crystal crosses
in their glass cups, and church bells
call across Washington Square.

Book browsers surface
rom City Lights, shop keepers
roll down their awnings as the sun
sinks over the hills.  No answers

at the edge of this last place.
No news to be found in a bird’s mouth.

 

 

 

David’s Camera, Stolen in San Francisco

18 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Gatherings, Grief, Uncategorized

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