Authors: Naomi Shihab Nye
Even at this late date, sometimes I have to look up
the word “receive.” I received his deep
and interested gaze.
A bean plant flourishes under the rain of sweet words.
Tell what you think
â
I'm listening
.
The story ruffled its twenty leaves.
*
Once my teacher set me on a high stool
for laughing. She thought the eyes
of my classmates would whittle me to size.
But they said otherwise.
We'd laugh too if we knew how
.
I pinned my gaze out the window
on a ripe line of sky.
That's where I was going.
Today reminded me of Christmasâbright and utterly lonely
.
Coleman Barks
I placed one toe
in the river of gloom.
On the streets of the cold city
a man with two raw gashes at his temple
fingered them gently.
Middle-aged sisters selling old plates and postcards
Three Floors of Bargains *** Step Right In !
stared glumly at a large clock.
December was just beginning.
One touched up her lipstick.
She could see herself between the 6 and 7.
Sunday-school children ate cookies
shaped like trees.
A waiter draped garlands of crumpled greenery
above the door of his restaurant,
adjusting the velvet bow.
A toothless woman wearing plastic bags
asked for the hour, which I gave her
too enthusiastically.
Here they came again.
Rolls of wrapping paper.
Red letters of ads.
I wasn't hungry
for the countdown.
Cluttered days
so sharp they cut.
What about our people
on the giant list of loves?
What would we give them
this time around?
The days say we will
look and look and look.
I plunged my foot
into the river of gloom,
it said it did not need me.
Santa has a bad memory.
Santa forgets your name
the minute he talks
to the next person.
Santa calls you by a baby's name
and doesn't even know.
Ho! Ho! Ho!
Should you tell Santa?
Already he thought you were a girl
though you just had a haircut
last week.
How can he remember
all those wishes?
How will Santa ever find
our house?
The world has turned to
red sweaters, jingles,
freezing rain.
Santa says he's on a diet,
that's why he's not eating pancakes
with the rest of us.
Mrs. Claus told him to
lose some weight.
Santa keeps drifting back
for more chatting.
He sits down at our table.
What else can we say to Santa?
Santa says
ain't
.
The phone rang in the middle of the Fairbanks night and was always a wrong number for the Klondike Lounge.
Not here
, I'd say sleepily.
Different place. We're a bunch of people rolled up in quilts
. Then I'd lie awake wondering, But how is it over there at the Klondike? The stocky building nestled between parking lots a few blocks from our apartment like some Yukon explorer's good dream of smoky windows and chow. Surely the comforting click of pool balls, the scent of old grease, flannel, and steam. Back home in Texas we got wrong numbers for the local cable TV company. People were convinced I was a secretary who didn't want to talk to them. They'd call four times in a row.
Sir
, I eventually told a determined gentleman,
We've been monitoring your viewing and are sorry to report you watch entirely too much television. You are currently ineligible for cable services. Try reading a book or something
. He didn't call back. For the Klondike Lounge I finally mumbled,
Come on over, the beer is on us
.
Because I would not let one four-year-old son
eat frosted mini-wheat cereal
fifteen minutes before dinner
he wrote a giant note
and held it up
while I talked on the phone
LOVE HAS FAILED
then he wrote the word
LOVE
on a paper
stapled it twenty times
and said
I STAPLE YOU OUT
*
memory stitching
its gauze shroud
to fit any face
he will say to his friends
she was mean
he will have little interest
in diagramming sentences
the boy / has good taste
enormous capacities
for high-tech language
but will struggle
to bring his lunchbox home
I remember / you
you're / the one
I stared at in the / cloud
when I wasn't paying / attention
to people / on the ground
*
the three-year-old wore twenty dresses
to her preschool interview
her mother could not make her
change
take some off her mother pleaded
and the girl put on a second pair of tights
please I'm begging you
what will they think of us
the girl put all eight of her pastel barrettes
into her hair at once
she put on
her fuzzy green gloves
she would have worn four shoes but could not
get the second pair on top of the first pair
her mother cried you look like a mountain
who has come to live with me
she had trouble walking
from the car up to the school
trouble sitting
in the small chair that was offered
the headmistress said
my my    we are a stubborn personality
If we throw our eyes way out to sea,
they thank us. All those corners
we've made them sit down in lately,
those objects with dust along
their seams.
Out here eyes find the edge
that isn't one.
Gray water, streak of pink,
little tap of sun,
and that storm off to the right
that seems to like us now.
How far can the wind carry
whatever lets go? Light
shining from dead stars
cradles our sleep. Secret light
no one reads byâ
who owns that beam?
Who follows it far enough?
The month our son turned five
we drove between cotton fields
down to the bay. Thick layers
of cloud pouring into one another
as tractors furrowed the earth,
streams of gulls dipping down
behind. We talked about
the worms in their beaks.
How each thing on earth
searches out what it needs,
if it's lucky. And always
another questionâ
what if?
what if?
Some day you'll go so far away
I'll die for missing you,
like millions of mothers
before meâhow many friends
I suddenly have! Across the bay
a ship will be passing, tiny dot
between two ports meaning nothing
to me, carrying cargo useless to my life,
but I'll place my eyes on it
as if it held me up. Or you rode
that boat.
Serum of steam rising from the cup,
what comfort to be known personally by
Barbara
,
her perfect pouring hand and starched ascot,
known as the two easy eggs and the single pancake,
without saying.
What pleasure for an immigrantâ
anything without saying.
My uncle slid into his booth.
I cannot tell youâhow I love this place
.
He drained the water glass, noisily clinking his ice.
My uncle hailed from an iceless region.
He had definite ideas about water drinking.
I cannot tell you
âall the time. But then he'd try.
My uncle wore a white shirt every day of his life.
He raised his hand against the roaring ocean
and the television full of lies.
He shook his head back and forth
from one country to the other
and his ticket grew longer.
Immigrants had double and nothing all at once.
Immigrants drove the taxis, sold the beer and Cokes.
When he found one note that rang true,
he sang it over and over inside.
Coffee, honey
.
His eyes roamed the couples at other booths,
their loose banter and casual clothes.
But he never became them.
Uncle who finally left in a bravado moment
after 23 years,
to live in the old country forever
,
to stay and never come back
,
maybe it would be peaceful now,
maybe for one minute,
I cannot tell youâhow my heart has settled at last
.
But he followed us to the sidewalk
saying,
Take care, Take care
,
as if he could not stand to leave us.
I cannot tellâ
how we felt
to learn that the week he arrived,
he died. Or how it is now,
driving his parched streets,
feeling the booth beneath us as we order,
oh, anything
, because if we don't,
nothing will come.