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Cardinal Points

~ Poetry By Sandra Sidman Larson

Cardinal Points

Category Archives: Over a Threshold of Roots

My 2nd chapbook, a tribute to family published by Pudding House Press 2007

Ballroom Dance Partners

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Grief, Over a Threshold of Roots

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For Eleanor and Gordon Sidman

i
They had so many records to choose from—
Eddie Duchin, Guy Lombardo, Montivanti.
Centering themselves in the living room, the needle set
in the groove, he places his right hand just above her left hip.
Squared to each other they step together step into a fox trot:
one two three four, one two three four—or a waltz:
one two three, one two three
ii
Lost in reverie they practice for the luxury liner, two
eighty-year-olds who want to duplicate the prize they won
last year—crowned king and queen of the cruise.
The captain’s table their reward along with ermine
cape, crown, and scepter.

iii
In another house, their elder daughter slips out Lester Lanin, spins
him on the Magnovox.. Wearing a strapless gown with a bright red
satin bow, she descends the stairs as if stepping out of new snow.
The tulle skirt, dotted with rhinestones, sparkles
as she greets her date, stiff in his tuxedo.

iv
A gardenia corsage in a florist shop bursts open the thoughts
of the younger daughter to a party gown with sequins splayed over
an electric blue bodice, wind blowing off the moon-papered lake.
Squeeze, squeeze to a rumba beat, to a rumba beat.

v
Now the house is packed up for leaving. The two daughters
pull out the slide carousel, darken the room and watch
their parents dance by one last time—She in her sea-green
voile, full-length gown, he in his white dinner jacket, black trousers:

One two three four—there goes Bermuda.
One two three four—there goes St. Croix, and in the distance, click,
One two three—there goes St. Thomas.

Published in Over A Threshold of Roots

An Adopted Granddaughter Who Didn’t Know It

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Childhood, Grief, Over a Threshold of Roots

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for Anthony Wills

1879-1914

It is the eyes—slightly protruding, dark.
He stares at me.  Holding the crumbling
photo I ask, Who is this? 

Your grandfather, my mother replies.
Then who is the grandfather I call Grandfather? 
The man in the picture follows this question
without taking his eyes off of me. 
My father died when I was seven years
old, and
Nana married again,
the grandfather you know,

my step-father.  He adopted me.

My mother looks like a little girl hiding behind
this man in the picture she’d covered up
for so many years.  I look exactly like him. 

She is silent.  He is silent.
I stare right back at him—
the man with my eyes. 
My blood thickens.

Published, Over a Threshold of Roots, Sandra Larson, Pudding House Chapbook Series, 2007

Clothes in the Closet

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Childhood, Love and Lust, Over a Threshold of Roots

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Tags

sex

dozens of cloche hats,
shoe boxes, fancy high heels,
dresses sequestered in zippered bags—
the sisters searching
for their mother’s sequined,
knee-length, flapper gown
and her sailor costume
with middy blouse.

A sister afternoon—
the younger practices
the fine art of being taller,
flaunting
tiny, shimmering flakes
of white and pastel sequins,
so heavy in their
accumulation.

The older readies
for an ocean voyage,
packing what can’t be packed
until she gets there.

A flock of scarves,
like gull wings, flutter
down off the shelves
exposing a submerged book–

The Art of Love-Making: 100
Oriental Positions to Enhance
Your Marital Relationship.

No sailor blouses, no sequins,
in fact, no fabric to cover
the facts of life.  The book
is finally shut— if not closed—
put back in its original position.
The shoes are reboxed, the clothes rehung—
their mother’s dress-up world,
closeted for now.

Published Over a Threshold of Roots, Sandra Larson, Pudding House Chapbook Series, 2007

The Seventy-year-old, Blue Brocade Dress

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Childhood, Over a Threshold of Roots

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From the old trunk I lift the blue brocade
dress of my great grandmother—her “Sunday best”—
when she was a young girl.

I slip it over my head and close
each mother-of-pearl button
over my torso, smooth out the flowing folds,

hold out my hand and escort myself
into her garden, the one filled
with magnolia trees.

A million magenta buds begin to flower.

Published Over a Threshold of Roots, Sandra Larson, Pudding House Chapbook Series, 2007

Hey, Doll

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Childhood, Over a Threshold of Roots

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For Judy

Little girl, sitting
so properly,
ankles crossed,
thumbs up,
ready to be lifted
out of the past,
give me your hand.

Your tiny cupid mouth
has never let out
a scream, a laugh,
yet, your cream-
colored face has tiny
hair-line cracks.
yet, you, the perfect child,
sit in your rocking
chair, holding
your companion bear.

Your wardrobe has come
down to this—
limp pink pinafore,
the starch long gone.
Here, let me rock you
once again.

The golden irises
of your brown eyes,
wide-looking. One eye
crossed helps you see
beyond me.

But then,
we go back so far
together
we don’t need
to look too deeply
into one another.

Published Over a Threshold of Roots, Sandra Larson, Pudding House Chapbook Series, 2007

A Girl’s Instructions for Body Surfing

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Childhood, Over a Threshold of Roots

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Nose up—circle
like a seal—eye
the horizon—
its undulations of change—
the play of light and dark—
hills building—
a mountain of uneven weight
rising into a huge wall.
Swim towards it!
Suddenly suspended under
it’s height, you are engulfed—
for an instant—
in an arc of pure stillness—
pure light.

Toss the body forward—
join this rushing wave—
head jutting out of its curling edge—
roar of roiling water in your ears—
sweep into shore riding
these wet shoulders.

Now a vortex of shells—
foam—
sand-tossed body—
shaken—

Get up—
turn—
dash back into
the churning surf—
catch the crest
of the world
once more!

Published Over A Threshold of Root, Sandra Larson, Pudding House Chapbook Seried, 2007

No One Spoke

15 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Childhood, Grief, Over a Threshold of Roots

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Tags

flowers

For Charles and Bessie Newmiller, my maternal grandparents

No one spoke,
the host, the guest,
the white chrysanthuemums.
Ryota

Yellow, pink, crimson, white,roses
rest in a silver vase.

Through the French doors out into the garden,
behind the house on Parkway, I see you,
Grandfather, bending down, the white
New Jersey noon heavy on your back
as you clip your favorite roses.

Across the quiet oriental rugs,
I find you, Nana, sitting in the soft light
of your living room, writing
at the maple secretary,
your back to me.

A single rose stands on one thin
silver leg to keep us company.
The clock ticks on the mantle, china
dogs stare down from the bookcase,
mute as a grandchild watching.

Across the years I see the landscape
of your lives, the enclosure of your plans,
but I would need enormous language, Nana
to have you turn to me, for you, Owah,
to bring me roses—

yellow, pink, crimson, white—
roses for a silver vase.

Published in Over A Threshold of Roots, Sandra Larson, Pudding House Chapbook series, 2007

 

The Magnolia Tree at 147 North Mountain Avenue Montclair, New Jersey

14 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Childhood, Life Reflections, Over a Threshold of Roots

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For Alfred, Mabel and Lucy Sidman, my father’s parents and paternal grandmother.

They were like the dolls in my dollhouse—each one of them
positioned in their own place when my family (my mother, my father,
my older sister and I) arrived for a visit; but with the changing seasons,
they rearranged themselves. G.G., my great grandmother, usually sat
out on the porch in warm weather. When the air turned brisk,
she resettled herself in a red velvet rocking chair by the window
in the parlor. Grandma seemed too shy to go outside in any season.

She hovered like a hummingbird in the pantry arranging cups and plates.
Or, she sat at the upright piano in the living room, tapping each key stiffly
just after her quavering voice hit the next note of tunes like Celito Lindo.
She had learned these from her sister, Great Aunt Mina, who lived in Mexico City
and sent postcards of volcanoes, but never came to visit.

Grandpa used the dining room for an office, paying bills, thumbing through
seed catalogues. Only he ventured out in every season, although I never knew
him to take anyone for a ride in his black Ford (with running boards on the side)
that idled in the dilapidated garage behind the house. In winter
he went outside wrapped in a muffler to put suet in his many birdfeeders.
Come summer he would fuss with his trellised morning glories in the back yard,
or emerge from the root cellar bearing potatoes and beets. I wondered
about the beets, could they be the hearts of trolls that lived under the house
and were extracted secretly as I knew unwanted mice were from their traps?

Magnolias appeared every spring. They were what lured G.G. out
onto the front porch. When the hard buds burst open and the sweet,
unmistakable aroma of magnolia filled the front yard, she would call to me,
Dearie, come and see. Dearie, come and see.

From the magenta buds nestled in green waxy leaves, one beautiful flower
after another would appear dressed in the soft color of cream with a hint
of pastel pink. She would only stop talking when she grew tired of her own
question. Dearie, Dearie, aren’t they just exquisite? Aren’t they just exquisite?

Was it her age that made her notice everything? I knew I was her flower too,
but I couldn’t stop to answer her; nor thank my grandfather for the birds
he painted for me on my seventh birthday—an oriole, a swallow and a cedar
waxwing—each on it own pearly white, porcelain plate.

On one visit, in a hushed voice, my father confided in me that my grandfather
was an electrical engineer, and he had pulled electricity up the Amazon River
in his younger days. I imagined the river as dark as his attic. I couldn’t imagine
the rope of electricity. Nor that my grandmother had been firm enough to teach school, or that G.G. had seen Abraham Lincoln when she was eight. His picture
was in the living room. I thought maybe he had known, even then,
what would happen to him as his eyes were as large as sad lakes.

One day, on a very warm summer afternoon, my grandparents arrived
for a visit to our house. G.G. wasn’t with them. G.G. had lived on the third story
of the house, and once in awhile I was allowed upstairs. I’d follow
the carved railings of mahogany, the flowers entwined with vines
on Persian carpet runners, up into the dark hallways and closed doors,
but I never found G.G.

On rare occasions, I was sent to spend the night. I’d set my hair brush
and comb on the bureau next to the hand-painted pin boxes decorated
by Great Aunt Kate, another in a long line of relatives whose possessions
where everywhere, but who only lived as storybook characters this house.

I was always full of questions, but Grandmother never discussed “subjects”
with me, she just hummed under her breath and smiled. “Subjects”
were for school, other teachers now. I felt very small in the great four-poster
bed where she kissed me and tucked me in. It was the same bed that collapsed
on a visiting couple one Thurber-like night in my grandfather’s memory.
He loved to tell the story, chuckling about how he was awakened by the noise
and what happened next.

What happened next was that the pictured peaks of Mexico, the four poster bed,
the magnolia tree all vanished as did my father and his entire family. My house
of memory is filled with Victorian furnishings, old-fashioned people, dim light,
and I have—in my more careless life— discarded or lost most of the gifts
they gave to me; but, G.G., let me finally answer you—
The
magnolias? Yes, they are exquisite, just exquisite.

 

Published in Over A Threshold of Roots, Sandra Larson, Pudding House Chapbook Series, 2007

 

 

 

 

Tree House in the Woods

14 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Childhood, Over a Threshold of Roots

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Over a threshold of roots, an archway of branches,
the little girls entered their tree house of birches.
Where birches bent back they built
a small kitchen, knelt down to make leaf cakes
and worm pies and set them out to bake.

All summer long they were the wives of green leaves
with husbands of wood.  The ants, like children,
they brushed out the door and lay in their living room
listening to birds in the attic.  In winter

they abandoned the house—the floors
too deep, too wet, too many windows to close,
but in spring they returned, shook out
the carpets, rearranged furniture of twigs.

One spring, the stand of birches—their branches
burnished silver—their leaves bursting with green—
stood abandoned—no housewives of trees threw open
their doors, rejoiced over windows to clean.

 

Published Over a Threshold of Roots, Sandra Larson, Pudding House Chapbook Series, 2007

 

What is Usually Seen as Too Small to Mention

14 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by Sandra Sidman Larson in Childhood, Over a Threshold of Roots

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On readying her mother’s dollhouse for her granddaughter,
this daughterless grandmother picks up the plot.

The porcelain dolls, so familiar. Mother, with perfectly organized
hair, fixes the household for the return of faithful father.

At suppertime, son and daughter, suited and frocked, sit
dutifully in their chairs, heir napkins carefully placed in their laps.

The family stares at little silver forks, knives and spoons as correctly set
as the evening’s conversation. In the kitchen the refrigerator

keeps everything fresh without a chill. The Campbell soup unopened
remains on the pantry shelf where once again the catsup hasn’t spilled.

The opaque kitchen door is swung wide by the maid to bring in the evening
meal, a roast cemented to its platter, tiny potatoes by its side.

Upstairs, the nursemaid in her once crisp whites continues to draw
the children’s bath so they will be clean for prayers with mother.

In the living room fireplace, grated coals emit a steady glow
as father tries to retrieve his favorite novel anchored to the bookshelf.

Mother and father talk awhile before sleep until the dollhouse-keeper
securely latches the outer walls, turns off the porch light,

wishes them a good night and good luck with their new
mistress and her desires.

Published in Over a Threshold of Roots Sandra Larson, Pudding House Chapbook Series, 2007

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