Household God

Daddy and the aunts

You were a household god,
Not a faraway god in heaven’s vault
But a jovial Jove
Full of life and power.
I sprang from your forehead,
Not fully Athena
But to become Wisdom
And Responsible
And Chosen.
Your ego was Olympian,
Thunderbolts would fly from your fury,
Then all Justice and Mercy.
A bacchanalian god–
Wine flowing as we danced in the kitchen.
I worshiped at your feet
When you lay mortally wounded,
Your life your Achilles heel.
I worship you still
With the laughing spirit you are
Now and forever. Amen.

 

*** For my dad, John L. Gresham on Fathers Day. This is a poem I wrote after his death in 1994 and the photograph was taken just not a year before with his three sisters. I love this picture of them laughing together, each with such a distinctive voice and laugh. He was the adored baby brother of three sisters and his children adored him as well.

Happy Fathers Day, Daddy. I love and miss you each day.

Now Available – Penelope to Her Husband

Penelope Cover

Do you love fantasy and stories rich in texture? (And really who doesn’t?) Are you charmed by the idea of mythological creatures and hearing the sound of dragon wings in the air?

Well, here is the book for you! Penelope to Her Husband is filled with poems for everyone who dreamed of elves and knights, dragons and hobbits and all things magic. A book of poems opening onto worlds of gods and goddesses, naiads and gnomes, and strange characters dancing in the moonlight.

To order your copy, go to lulu.com http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/kge

Or you can purchase them here. If you purchase directly from me, please email kathleengeverett@gmail.com , letting me know which volume you wish to purchase. And if you would like me to sign the book, the name of the person I will be signing it for.
Just use these Paypal links ( yes, they are supposed to appear as buttons, but I am hopeless at linking things 🙂 )

In the US:
https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=SAY8N4NVKD2VW

In Canada:
https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ADVE8RPA5K5Y

Outside the US and Canada, it would be best to use Paypal due to the shipping costs.

I am so excited to share these with you – order yours today!

Household God

For my dad, John L. Gresham,
He is missed every day.
Happy Father’s Day – I love you

Household God

You were a household god,
Not a faraway god in heaven’s vault
But a jovial Jove
Full of life and power.
I sprang from your forehead,
Not fully Athena
But to become Wisdom
And Responsible
And Chosen.
Your ego was Olympian,
Thunderbolts would fly from your fury,
Then all Justice and Mercy.
A bacchanalian god–
Wine flowing as we danced in the kitchen.
I worshiped at your feet
When you lay mortally wounded,
Your life your Achilles heel.
I worship you still
With the laughing spirit you are
Now and forever. Amen.

counting the days until spring

Spring Garden b 2013
counting the days until spring

Antsy,
she couldn’t stay still.
Pacing wall to wall,
she could almost smell the damp earth
under the frozen crust
as the sound of sleet
echoed against the fossil dimpled stone.
Her thoughts drifted to warm dawns
filled with perfume of sweet grass
and whining of midges-
her breath quickened
with the rising sap
tapped deep under the winters crust.
She could hear green things
begin to stir,
bulbs burgeoning with embryonic april.
A blush rose from her breasts
to pink her cheeks,
leaving her face glistening
with the heat of june afternoons.
A carpet of green followed in her footsteps
as chamomile and bluets
bloomed in her wake.
Climbing with each change of shadow,
anticipation springing from the tilted axis,
she rushed to greet the vernal wood
in rapture of spring.

Penelope to Her Husband

Penelope to Her Husband

The morning you left
sunlight streamed through the open windows,
warm breezes with the scent of the sea
perfumed the marble hall.
I strung my loom;
each warp thread taut,
with just one golden strand
loosed.
As my shuttle moved
back and forth,
whisking the weft lines,
I imagined the sound of wooden oars
pulling your ship
across the emerald waters.

The threads changed
azure to turquoise,
cerulean to indigo,
silvered filaments mixed with ivory silk
agleam on the ocean.
For days the tapestry formed the coursing waves,
frothy flumes pearled white,
colorful fish and seahorses
rose; along with porpoises
and whales, exotic sea creatures appeared.
Weeks and months spent with wheel and spindle,
flax and wool and silken thread;
weaving slowed as lethargy
encompassed me.
An island of lotus formed from the deep
muddy-textured fabric,
leaving me dazed and glass-eyed on my cushion.

Waking at the moonless hour
I wandered the hall,
the marble cold under my bare feet.
It was then I drew back the loose
golden thread
and unraveled years of work
until I reached the clearer waters
of the earliest months.
Then, in the morning light,
I began to thread the loom
anew.

As the day’s weaving progressed
line by line, the texture
was rougher, a wind-whipped dark sea.
The iris of a monstrous eye
revealed itself in strands
of obsidian and jet;
line by line and row by row
the pupil dilated in rage.
A red woolen yarn bled onto the warp
blotching the field
as though the lives of your sailors spilled across the cloth.
At that moment my lamp’s wick sputtered
over the loom,
an ember fell onto the wide pupil,
an acrid stench rose from the singed material.

Again, wakening in the darkest hour,
my footsteps hollow in the marbled room,
I crossed to the loom,
pulled the solitary golden thread,
littered the cold floor with the remnants of years
until only the deep sea
remained.

Rough flaxen strands
in tarnished silver and violet
spun into spindles of sea
foam; dyed silk from eastern
shores threaded
skeins of scales and shells
until, in the sound of the threads,
a siren’s song is heard,
catches everyone’s ears,
pulls the strings into tangles,
threatens the tapestry’s doom.
I fed tufts of muslin
and heavy cotton into the warp,
muffling the captivating song
until nothing could be heard
but the soft shush of the threaded sea.

Day after day the ocean’s roar
sounds at the loom;
waves and tidal moons
appear, disappear and reappear
in the cresting foam.
A violent whirlpool of thread
fills the ground of linen,
tugging each line down
towards Poseidon’s throne,
catches the wind-filled silk
sails, until it seems the tapestry
itself may be lost to the deep.

Sleepless, I wander
from window to window
longing to see the fire of your ship
drawing again the golden thread,
unraveling the fear of losing
you to years of clear sailing
in the Aegean’s blue silk.
By morning light,
the threading of the loom begins
once more.

Clear seas drift across the tapestry
filling the days with sun and blue skies.
I work warp and weft to the sound
of seabirds in the harbor.
As her island appears in the new foreground
and the threads move from dark
to golden in beauty and form,
graceful flora and fauna appear
and make their way to this happy shore.
Every night, for seven years,
I unravel her beauty, try to relinquish her hold.
Each morning the same island appears;
each night its inhabitants’ charm and beauty
is left on the marble floor

until on that fateful morning ,
as traders and Phaeacian ships
make their way into port
and all that is seen across the linen field
are the turquoise sea and pale sands
of a welcoming harbor,
a beggarman with the blue eyes of a sailor and hero,
makes his way into the marbled halls,

searches for my loom, and, reaches for that golden thread,
strings the bow of great Odysseus –
and you are home.

*** Congratulations to anyone who persevered to the end of this poem!
I would like to thank Tony Maude, http://rumoursofrhyme.wordpress.com/. His thoughtful editing made this a much better poem and I am in his debt.

Hephaestus’ Forge and Recycling of the Ozarks

‘Hephaestus’ Forge and Recycling
Will Buy Scrap’
This sign sent every Tom, Dick and Ned
Down into the hollows
Dragging up the old car parts and bed
Springs hidden under the poison ivy
And dank leaves.
That very afternoon,
A slow serpentine of trucks,
Trailers and cars with open trunks
Loaded down with rusty metal,
Made its way up the ridge to the forge-
Furnace heat felt before the smoke
Came down to curl around the rust laden caravan.
I thought that Hep must pay good
To make these men scrap and work
But then I reached the bald knob
And saw not the crippled blacksmith
But his new bride-
A girl not purdy but beautiful-
A vision that knew her worth
And made every man want her
As she sauntered across the yard
And into the cabin
Before a man could catch his breath.
Like a shot,
Each man furiously pitched
The t-posts and wire out of their trailers
To turn an’ high tail it back down to the hollows
Searching for the old trash piles
To have another reason
To drive back to the mountain top
And see Aphrodite again.