| Ingrid Wendt USA
idwendt@msn.com
| Ingrid Wendt
lives in Eugene, Oregon. Her books of poems include Moving the
House (BOA Editions, selected by William Stafford for the New
Poets of America Series) and Singing the Mozart Requiem (Breitenbush),
which received the Oregon book award for poetry. From Here We
Speak: An Anthology of Oregon Poetry, which she co-edited, was
published by Oregon State University Press. She is also co-editor,
with Elaine Hedges, of In Her Own Image: Women Working in the
Arts (The Feminist Press and Mc-Graw Hill). Most recently on the
MFA creative writing faculty of Antioch University, Los Angeles,
Wendt has been a Senior Fulbright Professor at the University of
Frankfurt/Main, Germany, and has taught for over 20 years in various
Arts-in-Education programs in several states. Her teaching guide Starting
with Little Things: A Guide to Writing Poetry in the Classroom
(Oregon Arts Foundation) now in its fourth printing, is being
offered by the German publisher Ernst Klett for European
distribution. Her first two books are archived at http://capa.conncoll.edu/wendt.moving.html,
and http://capa.conncoll.edu/wendt.singing.html |
Mussels
For Ralph
We've learned where the big
ones grow,
to harvest not from the tops of
rocks where shells
fill with sand
to follow the tide out to the
farthest reefs we can reach
and still not get wet, where last
time we found
giant anemones green-sheathed and
dripping under
the overhangs like the cocks of
horses, we laughed, or
elephants, having each come to
the same conclusion,
fresh from bed and married long
enough
to say such things to each other,
again
to remember the summer we first
discovered mussels
big as fists protecting Sisters
Rocks.
Just married and ready for
anything, even
mussels were game, black as
obsidian, stubbornly
clinging to rocks, to each other,
their shells
so tightly together we had to
force them apart
with a knife, the meat
inside a leap of orange,
poppy-bright; and when
three perch in a row took the
hook you'd baited
tender as liver we said we must
try them ourselves
someday, if they're safe, which
they weren't
all the years we lived down
south: red algae in summer
tides infiltrating our chance to
experiment, food without precedent,
how would we know what to do?
Counting at last on friends who
had been to Europe and now
are divorced, we waded waist deep
to pick some,
scraping our knuckles raw on
barnacles
none of us knowing to soak our
catch two hours at least
to clean out the sand; the sand
we took in with butter and lemon
cleaning our teeth for a week.
Now we can't get our fill of
them.
Weekend vacations you work to the
last, cooking
one more batch to freeze for
fritters or stew.
Now we harvest them easily, take
the right tools, wear boots
we gave to each other for
birthdays so we don't have
to remember to watch out for
waves
to feel barnacles unavoidably
crushed underfoot
like graveyards of dentures waves
have exposed, although
sometimes now I find myself
passing over the biggest, maybe
because
they've already survived the
reach of starfish,
blindly prowling on thousands of
white-tipped canes,
or they've grown extra
barnacles,
limpets, snails, baby anemones,
rock crabs hiding behind. As though
age after all counts for
something
and I've grown more
tender-hearted,
wanting you not to know about the
cluster
I found today, for the first
time in years having taken time
off from job
and housework and child care,
sleeping so late
my feet got wet on the incoming
tide, unexpectedly
talking aloud, saying look at
that one, bigger even
than Sisters Rocks: a kind of
language
marriage encourages, private as
memories of mussels,
anachronistic as finding I miss
you
picking mussels to take home to
you
not the ones you'd pick if you
could but fresh
as any young lover's bouquet and
far more edible,
more than enough to last us at
least a week.
from Singing the Mozart Requiem (Breitenbush
Books, 1987)
The Teacher I Wanted to Be
my own forever, my mother
asked home to lunch each spring,
each spring someone new:
Miss Bloss, Mrs. Kuk, Miss
Michaelson never
suspecting we waited for blossom
time,
hoping the rain would hold off
long enough,
counting the days like notes of
that year's recital piece
always I played for her,
practicing
hours longer than any
hundred years' sleep any child
could ever imagine:
the princess, the castle
awakening, parting
branches blossoming over that
aisle of tulips and lilacs, bright
promises I didn't know I was
making someday
to become that same teacher each
spring
on the last day of school
surprised by a girl planting
instead of a secret next to the
ear bent low
a kiss, so quick she never could
hear what running
all the way home, crying, she all
year
had listened for: yes, she was
yes, a good girl
a good
girl
a good girl.
From Singing the Mozart Requiem (Breitenbush
Books, 1987)
from
Questions of Mercy
(part 4 of 14)
4.
"Saatfrüchte sollen nicht
vermahlen werden"
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Father of Jürgen, lost
wherever your submarine went
down:
your son has become an architect,
working his way
up, from stage one. If only you
could see his own home,
angled just so, so the sun,
precisely at noon, will shine
through one small window: high,
high, just under the roof.
Father of Olivia, lost
who knows where: your daughter's
a teacher, she can't forget
finding, when she
was twenty, your photo, your Wehrmacht
uniform (so it
was true!), your parents,
insisting the ending was wrong.
When she can, she asks poets and
Jews to speak at her school.
Father of Volker (professor of
Geography): he learned at twelve
you fell
with the SS in Hungary. Every
Sunday the family
dinner: the East German question,
your absence everyone
skirted around. He's taken a
photo of where you fell, a flower.
He speaks this line from a poem: What
we seek for has no place.
Fathers whose names must not be
spoken
Fathers we don't know how to
mourn
Fathers who may not be in Heaven
Fathers who didn't come home
Father who did, who lived,
for your son's first six years,
behind bars
of a Russian prison camp, your
son--named for your
best friend shot down over
England--your son has become
a pastor, the father of four, a
concert organist. Big man.
Jolly man. All his life he has
hated his name.
first published in Nimrod International
Journal, © 1997 by Ingrid Wendt
Italy: Singing the Map
Varenna,
Ravenna, Verona: listen!
Each day the same call for
vespers, the same
church bells--five, or six, or
seven--shifting
places and rhythm, the way each
name
(Carerra, Ferrara, Volterra)
can be
rung like a chord--dominant,
tonic,
subdominant--each village diocese
superimposed over the lake.
Phonics
(Bellamo, Milano, Lugano)
like beads
on a rosary; hallowed, the sounds
the tongue
makes of experience, echoing. One
needs
practice, though, and alertness.
What
if Augustus (Assisi, Brindisi,
Frasassi)
had tried to exchange Ichia
for Carpi,
instead of Capri? What if
you, trying
to get to Merano, its
castle, started
out for Murano? You (Cortona,
Cremona,
Crotone)
would enjoy the museum of glass.
Perhaps it's the same as with
fauna
and flora: that one subtle
accent--
glossy or dull black cap (Arezzo,
Tremezzo,
Bomarzo)--telling us Marsh Tit
or Willow Tit. Hidden, the
presence
of gills distinguishing Amanita
from Puffball. It's serious
business,
this verbal bouquet: each
village, each town
(Geranium, Chrysanthemum,
Delphinium)
proud of its own unique
chromosomes.
Each village, each town, a place
(Laglio)
that just might (Menaggio)
try to elope
with your heart (Aureggio).
Learn to
sing its name. Love it well (Bellagio).
first published in The Antioch Review,
© 1994 by Ingrid Wendt
Still Life
Britt, had I been driving, I
wouldn't have stopped the car
where you did. Right then my own
focus was far over the rise:
finally surfacing, this
top right edge of northeastern
Norway, higher up even than
Vardø (that dot on the map, that
scar
retreating Germans once burned
onto the thumb
of the left hand of Finnmark):
this
rocky shoreline flat
up against the Barents Sea,
magnified
beyond imagining, here where the
world's largest
bulldozer finally came to the end
of the line, how
could my camera possibly capture
the size of that rubble: Titanic
after Titanic slabs frozen all
the way to the northern horizon
in that
impossible angle all history
books show.
But this is where you stopped the
car,
and with the children, clattered
down the steep
slope of the shoulder, bent over
a cluster of rust-
colored stones: rounded, smooth,
small
fists a river could have left
behind (except
this was the side of a mountain),
their surfaces blossoming ice-
green, almost chartreuse, and
yellow and orange; white; black;
scab-like; infinitesimal
spore-prints of distant galaxies;
sea spume, petrified: this
unexpectedly beautiful
lichen, surviving eons of Arctic
winter (and now,
all those miles in the trunk, on
the plane), and blooming, still,
in this still life of stones
gathered together on my
coffee table like lilac petals,
geraniums--flowers within
flowers--because you said I
should take them back to Tromsø,
thousands of miles from home,
where I never expected some days
to feel myself adrift and close
to sinking under too
many impressions, the whole wide
world
off-center. This sun,
where I never have seen it
before.
Those truant stars, my sense of
direction.
Myself, at the end of the birds'
own migration.
How to make sense of it all?
This borrowed apartment five
stories over the ground.
Picking me up, each time I look
back at that image of you,
looking down. Before me, these
treasured, hospitable stones.
first published in Calapooya Collage 19,
©1998 by Ingrid Wendt
© All Copyright, Ingrid
Wendt.
All Rights Reserved. Printed By Permission.
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