“He Sits,” For The Sunday Whirl Wordle #647

“Regret for the things we did can be tempered by time;
It is regret for the things we did not do that is inconsolable”
––Sydney J. Harris

He Sits

He sits, nearly invisible, in shadowed recesses
of his mansion’s broad front porch, picking at the tresses
of a well-worn antique doll, its dress once rich, now tattered,
its fine-textured porcelain now age-checkered and shattered.

Watch how his rumpled holiness now shifts his ancient bones
to shuffle off to wander through his mansion’s inner zones.
To trail his amber fingernails over collected treasures,
weeping over memories of his rich life’s past pleasures.

Up a spiral staircase, down its upper hall,
measuring his footsteps, careful not to fall,
the skin of memory remains to guide him on this path
toward that inner sanctum that’s become its aftermath.

Passing long-unopened chambers, he cracks open a door
to see a trail of building blocks scattered across the floor.
A blackboard with last lessons chalked across its slate––
a question and an answer whose two sides don’t equate.

Seeds of contrition start to sprout in his guilt-plowed brain.
If a past could be repurchased, he would do it all again
differently, replacing all his hard-won treasures
with time spent more rewardingly in familial pleasures.

 

Prompt words for The Sunday Whirl are: amber rumpled holiness skin ancient bones invisible weep chambers three seeds spiral  Image by AI (I will not do this often.)

If you are wondering about the quote I used to introduce my poem, here is a brief biography of Sydney J. Harris from Wikipedia:

Sydney Justin Harris was born in London, but his family moved to the United States when he was five years old. Harris grew up in Chicago, where he spent the rest of his life. He attended high school with Saul Bellow, who was his lifelong friend. In 1934, at age 17, Harris began his newspaper career with the Chicago Herald and Examiner. He became a drama critic (1941) and a columnist for the Chicago Daily News (1944). He held those positions until the paper’s demise in 1978 and continued to write his column for its sister paper, the Chicago Sun-Times, until his death in 1986.[3]

Harris’s politics were considered liberal and his work landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents. He spoke in favor of women’s rights and civil rights.[4] His last column was an essay against capital punishment.[5]

Harris often used aphorisms in his writings, such as this excerpt from Pieces of Eight (1982): “Superior people are only those who let it be discovered by others; the need to make it evident forfeits the very virtue they aspire to.”[6] And this from Clearing the Ground (1986): “Terrorism is what we call the violence of the weak, and we condemn it; war is what we call the violence of the strong, and we glorify it.”[7]

He was also a drama criticteacher, and lecturer, and he received numerous honorary doctorates during his career, including from Villa Maria College, Shimer College, and Lenoir Rhyne College.[8] In 1980–1982 he was the visiting scholar at Lenoir-Rhyne College in North Carolina. For many years he was a member of the Usage Panel of the American Heritage Dictionary. He was recognized with awards from organizations including the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Conference of Christians and Jews, and the Chicago Newspaper Guild. In later years, he divided his time between Chicago and Door County, Wisconsin. Harris was married twice, and fathered five children. He died at age 69 of complications following heart bypass surgery.[9]

Hot Tomatoes!!! for RDP

Hot Tomatoes!!!

Cut them, slice them,
Chop then, dice them.
No matter that tomato’s fate,
alas, I must admit I hate
to put my teeth in it at all.
I just can’t stand that juicy ball!

But, sauce and squeeze it,
pasta, cheese it?
I’m tomato’s biggest fan.
And ketchup? Man o man o man!

On fries or burgers, it’s the best.
Can’t get enough of its red zest.
Which goes to prove, whate’er the cost,
tomatoes just taste better squashed.

For RDP:Tomatoes

Good Bye Old Friend! FOTD Mar 23, 2024

The time finally came to move this 20 or more year-old Agave from its pot on the terrace down to the sculpture garden in the lot below. I have watched countless hummingbirds feed at its flowers as I sat at my writing desk over the years and will miss it, but it has long outgrown its pot which you can see above had to be shattered to remove the plant.  Good bye old friend. Here it has made its way all the way around the house and is about to exit from the front door to make its way down the street to the lower lot.

Click on photos to enlarge.

 

For Cee’s FOTD

That Woman in the Mirror, For SOCS, Mar 22, 2024

That Woman in the Mirror

The woman in the mirror has a better sense of humor than I do. This is because she does not need to depart to go into the world. She controls what is behind her and in front of her. Her wounds are my wounds. Her wrinkles are the selfsame wrinkles that fail to respond to the expensive face cream my sister sent me for my birthday. A gentle hint that my apparent age reveals her age, 4 years older.

The woman in the mirror does not necessarily reflect my feelings. She sometimes freezes in surprise at my tears. Chides me to get a hold on myself. She steams over at times and refuses to confront me. She does not flinch at sprays of toothpaste or a misting over of hairspray. She grows younger as the layers thicken. The woman in the mirror chides me to refresh my lipstick, define my eyebrows, pluck hair chins. Slowly, slowly, she ages—turning into first my mother and then my Grandmother, whom I had thought I had left so far behind. That self-pitying look? Shame on her, I chide. Those ever-lowering breasts, that additional girth? I will never get like that, I think, and then I remember.

There is a mirror in my house where my Grandmother cannot find me—a full-length miracle mirror where the one looking back at me is a woman in her 40’s, just barely overweight. She is my grandmother, stretched out—lengthened and diminished in width. It is the sort of mirror that was once seen in fancy dress shops that encouraged women to buy and buy. Like The Hollywood shop from fifty years ago, now long abandoned, shuttered and replaced by a Radio Shack…but whose charms can still lull me into a luxurious feeling that all is well. I am as I should be.

I flip off the bathroom light and move to the bedroom to catch a last glimpse of me in that magical full-length mirror, then climb into bed to dream and dream those slender dreams that, if we are lucky, are the ones that remain in our memory long after the mirrors have cracked and crumbled, like other more recent memories that fade quickly to give way to the past.

For the Stream of Consciousness Friday Prompt: The Room I am In

Almost Overlooked: For FOTD Mar 22, 2024

False Garlic

For Cee’s FOTD

Fibbing Friday for Mar 22, 2024

 

For Fibbing Friday the prompts are:

1. Abomasum: An indigenous Australian mom’s expression of disapproval. 
2. Absquatulate:  Taking up arm and leg exercise at such an advanced age that it does no good.
3. Amphisbaena: Hispanic frogs.
4. Antimacassar: A Russian ruler opposed to talking birds. 
5. Atingle: That sensation felt after a kiss.
6. Bailiwick: If the candle gets out of hand, take the water bucket and douse it!
7. Bafflegab: Unintelligible gossip.
8.. Calliope:  What ye should do if Andy Griffith falls ill. 
9. Cornucopia: Having to put up with painful swellings on the toes and heels.
10. Cryptozoology : Exotic animals purchased with bitcoin.

For RDP Colorful Streets

Click on photos to enlarge.

For RDP Colorful Streets

Purple Wreath For Cee’s FOTD, Mar 21, 2024

Petrea Volubilis or Purple Wreath For Cee’s FOTD

Wooden Heart (Inspired by Magritte for dVerse Poets)

René Magritte, Discovery (1927), oil on canvas

Wooden Heart

We often wash our minds clean here on memory lane,
so what was a dark portrait is illumined once again.

Daily random memories wash up on the shore
while sadder associations stand waiting by the door.

I do not choose remembering the dark spots in our past.
It is the brighter moments that I prefer to last.

The heart I formed from copper, the heart you carved of wood.
All the broken contracts healed by all the good.

Love stories come in fits and starts and so it was with ours—
we must choose our final endings by our selective powers

to decide what we will sift from memory’s fine sand,
and though the bitter moments haven’t been fully banned,

I daily choose the moments that I will remember—
that March day when our love was young, not your final September.

Photos will enlarge if you click on them.

When I met Bob, he was teaching art in Canyon Country, California. One day he brought me this pouch necklace he had made of leather in class. Inside was a wooden heart with his initial on one side and my initial on the other. Yes. I had to marry the man. Later, with his encouragement, I became a metalsmith and formed this heart out of copper for him. The pouch now also contains a lock of his hair, a lock of mine, a miniature bar of chocolate–his favorite food on earth–and a tiny dinosaur carved by one of his small sons in the studio where he worked with his dad. When I admired it, he gave it to me, just as Bob gave to me the family he brought with him when we married.

 

IMG_4662

For dVerse Poets “Everything We See”

Click on above link to see the prompt.  Click on THIS LINK to see other poems written to the prompt.

Diego with Crown of Thorns Flowers: For FOTD Mar 20, 2024

 

 

I discovered this photo of Diego smelling the flowers and I couldn’t find any evidence I’d ever posted it in my blog, so couldn’t resist posting it.  R.I.P. Diego. We miss you!!!!

 

For Cee’s FOTD