Authors: Naomi Shihab Nye
If you place a fern
under a stone
the next day it will be
nearly invisible
as if the stone has
swallowed it.
If you tuck the name of a loved one
under your tongue too long
without speaking it
it becomes blood
sigh
the little sucked-in breath of air
hiding everywhere
beneath your words.
No one sees
the fuel that feeds you.
One man closes his hand.
He will not show us
the silver buckle
he uncovered in his garden.
One man reads houses.
They make sense to him,
grammar of lights in windows.
He looks for a story to be part of.
One man has no friends.
His mother is shrinking
at a table with one chair.
She dreams a mouse
with her son's small head.
One man feels right.
The others must be wrong.
And the world? It does not touch him.
One man stares hard
at the other men's profiles
against the sky.
He knows he is one of five men
standing on a corner.
A crowd of strangers flies over your life
picking out landmarksâstainless steel
cake pan, jello mold, pastel box of
thank you notes. Someone's even put
a 25-cent price tag on the coffin
of Kleenex in the bathroom.
I'm a prowler, unable to smile back
at the bouyant women hired to coordinate
this last event.
Beside the dismantled bedframe,
a telephone with scrawled number of
SON DAVID EVANS
taped to the side.
You intended it to be read by someone else.
I hope he came by often including you
in his regular weeks, not just his holidays.
Your angels with lace collars.
Christmas cookie plate
and rattled tea towels.
How big we are, the living.
We stomp between your flexible curtain road
and the dictionary with a chunk torn out.
I'm caught in the kitchen with a sadness
flat as the icebox door.
Considering reductions: your horizon,
your hope. Antique wooden wardrobes
stuffed into three tight rooms.
Carrying the stack of blank typing paper
and the Scrabble game with the Santa sticker
circa 1950.
Now we're stuck together.
Wooden letters click in our hands.
We make
ABLE, ADEPT
.
Someone's
JIG
turns into
JIGSAW
.
Someone's
HUNCH
remains just that,
though we keep flying over it from different angles,
trying to make it larger,
trying to give it feet or hands or another ground
to stand on.
notices  flutter
from    telephone    poles
until    they    fade
OUR SWEET TABBYÂ Â Â Â AFRAID OF EVERYTHING
BIG GRAY CATÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â HE IS OUR ONLY CHILD
SIBERIAN HUSKYÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â NEEDS HIS MEDICINE
FEMALE SCHNAUZERÂ Â Â Â Â Â WE ARE SICK WITH WORRY
all night I imagine their feet
tapping up the sidewalk
under the blooming crepe myrtle
and the swoon of jasmine
into the secret hedges
into the dark cool caves
of the banana-palm grove
and we cannot catch them
or know what they are thinking
when they go so far from home
OUR BELOVED TURTLEÂ Â Â Â RED DOT ON FOREHEAD
VEGETARIANÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â NAME OF KALI
please      please      please
if you see them
call me      call me      call me
Somehow our grandfather's old smoking cabinet
which held playing cards and pipes
has ended up in my brother's guest bedroom
a thousand miles from Union Boulevard
where men dragged bundled laundry
in heavy carts down the street before dawn.
I feel startled each time I see it, expecting
the crisp dachshund who lived inside
and puffed smoke rings, doughnuts rising
from his tiny white cigaretteâhow did he get away?
Our grandfather's only toy.
They all ran, the gingham aprons and funnels,
the clock with an honest face.
Now we weigh an hour for a space
belonging to us.
Once it all belonged to us.
Our grandfather's long chair, the slope
of his arm resting as he slept.
He had German words inside his tongue.
He lit a cigarette for the dog with a squat body
and leaned back.
The rings said Zero Zero Zero
rising into the shades
drawn shut in the daytime.
Zero against tears.
Zero against assorted sandwich cookies
in frilled cups.
Zero against the broom and the saltshaker
and the Dutch cleanser aching in the cracks of the tiles.
We went home to a street called Harvey
wanting the thing which could not happen.
Everyone to get along
.
The dog thought it could happen.
Our grandfather who lit the match
carried a hat in his hands.
Where is his bed? His lamp?
*
I am confident the street called Harvey
lives in the zippered compartment of my purse.
It is mine forever. No one could steal it.
Giving me everything I go by,
my dictionary for
pine
and
blame
and
snow
.
On another street called Salah Eddin, a shopkeeper
called out,
Your father was the most handsome man
in Jerusalem when he left!
Tears for the men and women
who leave the places that know them.
For the streets we cannot fix
and the gray school copybooks,
weeks plotted neatly in Arabic
as if days were really square.
We marched from Tuesday to Wednesday cleanly.
Streets were the blood of our bodies;
and just as you could say veins or arteries
carried red or blue depending on whether
they were coming or going, so we each traveled
our streets coming and going at exactly the same momentâ
cells, scraps, puffs of living smoke.
Once with my scarf knotted over my mouth
I lumbered into a storm of snow up the long hill
and did not know where I was going except to the top of it.
In those days we went out like that.
Even children went out like that.
Someone was crying hard at home again,
raging blizzard of sobs.
I dragged the sled by its rope,
which we normally did not do
when snow was coming down so hard,
pulling my brother whom I called by our secret name
as if we could be other people under the skin.
The snow bit into my face, prickling the rim
of the head where the hair starts coming out.
And it was a big one. It would come down and down
for days. People would dig their cars out like potatoes.
How are you doing back there?
I shouted,
and he said
Fine, I'm doing fine
,
in the sunniest voice he could muster
and I think I should love him more today
for having used it.
At the top we turned and he slid down,
steering himself with the rope gripped in
his mittened hands. I stumbled behind
sinking deeply, shouting
Ho! Look at him go!
as if we were having a good time.
Alone on the hill. That was the deepest
I ever went into snow. Now I think of it
when I stare at paper or into silences
between human beings. The drifting
accumulation. A father goes months
without speaking to his son.
How there can be a place
so cold any movement saves you.
Ho!
You bang your hands together,
stomp your feet.
The father could die!
The son!
Before the weather changes.