Alembic. Volume 53 No. 1 November Editor Patricia Slonina. Advisor Jane Lunin

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Transcription:

ALEMBIC

Alembic The Literary Magazine of Providence College Volume 53 No. 1 November 1973 Editor Patricia Slonina Advisor Jane Lunin

Contributions Daniel Francazio Kathleen Mele Thomas Moses Debra Prevey Dora Schaffer Joseph Osborne Mark Casey William Godin April Selley Melissa Ana Margarita Cabrera Patricia Vient Clara McKnight Ann McDonald Jane Lunin Patricia Slonina All We Said On the Common Ground Oaks Encounter Nuts Untitled Dancing With Love Devotion The Wind Under the Rocks A Feather Morning City he's that way My Father Walking Selena Blues The dandelion strikes me with infinite possibilities Photographs Henry Golembeski

All We Said Every word, very worthlessly, dropped, down, down, like, loose, leaves, leaving, life to be crisp, but dead, everything we said, all we said. Daniel Francazio

on the common ground this time is not for a mild unsettling of spirits this time of year russet flaming trees i take the path down to where the woods rise up blazing giants to where the stream runs through the center of things i am the invader squashing mushrooms as i move looking for a place to winter and you are the hunter who comes out of the night ripping the hearts out of squirrels with a passionate hand but we are blind we are hiding behind our blindness tearing up roots trying to save ourselves searching on the common ground Kathleen Mele

Oaks Oaks stand guarding sacred earth, Never flinching persistent in their work, Extending branches phalanx forms, Hoofed scouts warn of thumbed invaders. Barbarians raping the valley with every step, Tearing her from womb to breast, Uprooting her treasures of spruce and pine, Leaving her as barren winter's dead. Laughing they leave her... Thomas Moses Encounter behind the screen your eyes like his would sink low as despair how can i compare all of that glass moon inside of me about to break mis-take? that smile just curved enough to inspire fire where the ashes of the last one lie dead not one red ember among the black. Debra Prevey

Nuts The squirrel is thick and rich in fur. When he runs his tail undulates: Brown cascade tumbling for nuts. Hoarder of the winter he pauses Clutching an acorn in his paws, little globe to tanic acid in his shrivelled paws. Is this the way my kyke calling friends See me, a Jew shrivelled to the economy of my skin? My cousin is five years a Jew. How old can she get before she becomes a threat to someone who thinks Jews are strange, wormy with age Prophetic vultures who will outlast all other men. Jews die like everyone else. We all Know we've seen the pictures, but really How long does she have? I drive home from work seeing death: The bodies of squirrels splashed by tire Treads as black as boots and just as firmly Rooted. The motorist racing to a second Hand. Not conscious of the season of the squirrel: Stockpiling for the winter. The motorist not Concerned with seasons but only getting home, and We all know squirrels are shall we say Expendable with their greedy eyes? Dora Schaffer

I The winter coated science museum squats like a toad upon the green sea ice of the Charles. Bare branches line the banks as the fish move slowly, myopic eyes wide always staring.... I have dreamed I was a fish many times. A mackerel running south towards warmer waters. Once I was chased by a whale and swallowed whole. The huge teeth slammed like a bear trap as I laid on my side gills flared and red I felt the warmth ana counted my ribs.... On windy nights I saw myself riding out a hurricane aboard a tuna boat green waves crashed T the gunwales. he tall, thin poles lashed back in the winds like the antennae of a lobster. I tied myself to the wheel, and when we sank I lay quiet on the bottom. Where the sharks plucked out my eyes red coral glittered in the green light of sunset on dark waters.... II I remember visiting a psychiatric ward. Passing the barred doors, the screams, the white jacketed doctor stared from behind black horned rimmed glasses asking, "Can I help you?" I hurried past and met a girl carrying a doll. Her eyes wide like cow's. "Where's my mommy? Is she coming soon?" Nobody remembers the fathers. All that remains are pictures in a photo album of their return from the war. Empty faces their hearts snagged on the barbwire of Bastogne, Guadalcanal. The day they came home the pigeons sat quiet along the dock and stared....

III I have seen these things and know there is no silence on the southern mountainside where the sunlight beats all day. It is here the falcon makes its nest, the snake poises to strike. The meadow mouse scurries under a gray rock trembling. The brilliance of the sun blinds the eyes of the mountain goat, and he rubs his eyes and runs to the cool shade of the nothern side where his heart beats slower. His eyes rest upon the mother ewe suckling the lamb. Joseph Osborne D ANCING The old priest trudged down the cold wet granite steps of the prison With his mind still inside the prison walls mulling over the electrocution he had garnished. The smell of singed hair burning in his nostrils kept his mind aware of his complicity And his parched throat begged for a shot of salvation, but none was to be had. He pulled the collar of his coat up tight against the back of his neck To gird him against the rain. He slipped a cigarette between his lips and he reached for his matches His bible-stained fingers latched on to the soggy pack and his eyes caught gods' message of Salvation to man emblazoned on the cover "Arthur Murray really hops at 155 w. 52nd Street! So can you. Enroll Now! " Mark Casey

With Love Tearing down old walls you find A child crying; His mother has gone shopping. The dog licks his face, they sit by the window. Yellow walls, toys monopolize the floor. (Don't cry, she'll come back.) You have left, other people steal your tears. Mother sits in a black leather chair. She thinks of the cut on his face, chickenpox, scraped knees. The dog sits with her, late; after father goes to sleep. She hopes he will come home for Christmas. So your late night friends have left, you lock yourself in; Think back to when it was easy. Your mother put your games in the closet, And you take new ones out. When the ends get frayed, and the snow falls You will go home, it's only natural. William Godin Devotion (for m e h e r b a b a ) You were so quiet, we weren't sure if you were still playing. They don't understand, imagine, cows. You know no bounds, I don't understand. Beyond what you see, It doesn't matter, it just isn't American. I take solace in the dried ink, in the tree and in you. There is a sunrise tomorrow, I just know. William Godin

The Wind U nder the Rocks The wind under the rocks carries the end of summer. The locusts relay the end in morse code across the cornstalks, bent straw scarecrows, ears peeling to reveal the fat naked gold of overripe kernels. Though the radishes split long ago revealing innards woven with brown worm paths and went to seed with the poppies whose fluted cups of seed still wait on brittle brown legs for release The crickets will not believe But hum at the torn red fingernail moon. April Selley A Feather to Mr. Jackson (written by an eight year old friend of the Jackson family, Melissa) I saw a Little feather. And all the worlds shine. I saw this when I was fine. Now from all Little feathers I can tell you right now, that I don't Know How this Little feather did that, but right This minute, this very minute I went home. Thinking of the Little feather which Looked Like Foam.

M orning for Candace Burnham It was so quiet the porch was the coolest part of the house and the smell of morning hung light. I slipped on my jeans and sweater; barefoot, softly (the floor created!) I walked outside and washed my face at the rain barrel. The grass was so cold my feet hurt and dew soaked the hem of my jeans. I sat on a rock near the water's edge and watched Bristol waking up I knew how God feels. Bright, yellow lights; mothers making pots of coffee and children fighting for the bathroom splashing water ana towels finally, coming to breakfast on doughnuts and milk. Even the seagulls were going to town crash-landing on the State Street dock, they waited for the six o'clock ferry with bundles for the natives of Prudence. Soon the sun appears. The sky fills with pinks and blues like the walls of a nursery. I am sitting on a huge baby, I think, and listen to a far-off buoy clang softly through the mist. The wind shifts. Perhaps I will sit until the dew is gone. I will watch the day from here the burning midday, the soft cooling of afternoon and the fireflies of summer evening. Someone might even see me a little brown speck against the green. Ana Margarita Cabrera

City I heard St. Patrick's sound its bells deep from the belfry's (Gothic) throat while blue pigeons pecked at the marble feet of Hercules in the park. I watched phony blind men stoop on cold granite curbstones, holding small tin cups and crouching with June beetles in the black shadows of the high rises. I heard the screaming of a Turbo train blowing her shrill whistle over the trestle; the hot breath of chow mein spilled from a Chinese restaurant I saw Chicano kids playing stick ball on asphalt in front of gray, blistered tenements as the aproned grocer cranked down his green canvas awnings; the pawn broker unlocked his shop. And I was flesh with the city my hair tangled in telephone lines the pulse of the subway, my heartbeat Caught in the teeth of street jargon, reading the poetry of ghetto prophets scrawled on gas station walls and the gospel of the New York Times. Patricia Vient Walking in the twilight of the evening, as we walk down trash scattered streets exchanging loves glances only time keeps us apart. Clara McKnight

M y Father Like clock work he gets up every morning at five. He lights the fire under a tin pot. He walks through rooms unfeeling in his routine way. then sits at a broken table in the dingy dark drinking bitter black coffee. Staring off into space dreaming of living. Slowly he stands, pulls on a heavy coat, blows at his hands, and walks into the semi-dark. Clara McKnight be's that way Things die shrivel and are forgotten be's that way Friendship runs hides under crisis never to be found again be's that way... yeah... be's that way sometimes you use I'm used more use see ya tomorrow be's that way like a storm you wiped out trust be's that way... be's that way sometimes huh? Clara McKnight

Selena Selena rises a new menstral phase slyly over the graveyard spying the cat in the alley looking for its dish while the old man in his stinking brown suit hoards peppers again and the boy brings the paper and i lean against the fake candles in the window (there's stained glass around the edge) and watch her soar above the shadows twitching the windows now is the time for reparation when the daystar departs and we feel the dusty gloom as the wind stirs one brown leaf into the bare twig i think of running into the kitchen and sealing her into a paper bag but i'd like to fork the yolk out of her eyes (how classical will you be then Selena) Ann McDonald

Blues The bay is full with blue fish. When they make their silver slicejumps you can see their skin crack in the light. At night when the water turns black satin you can hear them tying velvet bows with their tails. You can watch them do the death wriggle on the decks of cruisers and sportsfishermen with the ripping lures the men call rag mops knifing down their throats. And the fishermen are elated and the decks are bloody while the blues throb to turn inside out. Their last divings the spirit in peristalsis; riding out from the blood harness, writhing, snapping to a tremor a slender twitch, then just a hum. The endless circles of their eyes spinning back into the black waters where fire will fix them into the head of another creature. The fishermen drink another beer. They don't want to think about eternity: the ark of the blue fishes' bones or the shadow of the fish rising above the ensigns, floating; toward the hemorrhage of lapis lazuli it spun out from: the endless poem the bay is a single tear in. Jane Lunin

A dandelion strikes me with infinite possibilities This open-mouth gaze at the trembling greeness of willows the yellow wants to drink enough sun to sprout one more petal a perfect cup of slender fingers. The dandelion can be food if you're willing to forget yesterday's fields of daffodils and taste the sweet songs a mother makes singing her son to sleep. It can be the communion a little girl whose stiff white veil will not stay on her silky head, that golden pledge always ready to receive wandering guests disguised as lost angels, dandelions do not die. They fade into whiteness and float on a mid-afternoon breeze or the breathy wet wish of a sputtering child who sleeps in a glass greenhouse with no dead, no dying flowers only lively beds of dandelions and a secret river flowing from its source in the sun. Patricia Slonina