Here is a spare, wry poem from a California writer named Hiroshi Kashiwagi:
A Librarian Looks at Snails
watching
snails
coupling
I wonder
if they read
books on
sexuality
Copyright 2007 Hiroshi Kashiwagi; used by permission.
Here is a spare, wry poem from a California writer named Hiroshi Kashiwagi:
A Librarian Looks at Snails
watching
snails
coupling
I wonder
if they read
books on
sexuality
Copyright 2007 Hiroshi Kashiwagi; used by permission.
Snow fell on me.
I fell on snow.
Why it was white
I didn’t know.
By the way, the name "Snow White" has always puzzled me. I gather it's supposed to suggest virginity or purity. But imagine meeting her in the village. "Good morning, Snow. What's going on?"
The Position I Hold
I work for the Office of This and That.
Currently I am Vice President for the
Development of This.
For many years, however, I worked
as District Manager of That.
In many respects This and
That have been my life.
When people ask me at a party,
“What do you do?” I say, “A little bit
of This, and a little bit of That.” I’m not lying.
-Hans Ostrom
Best of luck with this, that, and the other thing--life itself. Peace be with you, and also with you.
Hast thou named all the birds without a gun;
Not Whitman
She, too, would sing herself
if such a song seemed not so
indulgent, presumptuous.
She leaves her blades of grass
lying under drifts of reticence.
What she knows, you may
know, but only if you ask,
and even then she may answer
only by asking you to sing a little
something of yourself.
Annual Interrogative
Crows in soupy light stomp
around broad lawns, pick at buffets
of bugs, shake sandwich-wrappers.
Perturbation is part of
the ravenous package of traits crows
have hauled with them over eons.
These birds have something to say
as they lift themselves and climb
the wind clumsily. They complain,
harangue, object, savage, and smart-off;
they pronounce CAW in several dialects,
are more menacing when they’re
silent, hopping sideways, holding
a grudge with an open beak, fixing
you with a stare, filing away your
coordinates for later air-attacks.
They’re miffed, moody, pessimistic, and
heavy-footed. Why I like them
more than more charming birds
is an annual interrogative I caw—
why?!—to myself.
Night Golf
by William Miller
After dusk, on moonlit nights,
the caddies returned to play
their version of the game.
Once more, it was a black
and white world, though
they owned it now,
tamed the course
shot by shot.
They learned to play
by feel, almost like
blind men swinging
in the shadows.
But they got better
than any mill owner
who played his poor game
of slice and curse.
One day they would play,
prove themselves
forever in the daylight world.
That day was coming soon,
or so they hoped,
as they carried heavy bags
in the hot sun
for men who called
the oldest, "boy."
"William Miller teaches African American literature
and creative writingat York College of Pennsylvania.
He has published four books of poetry and
eleven books for children. COPYRIGHT 2002
African American Review."
* * * * *
Can’t Complain, Am Concerned
Life provides me with assistance,
which includes oxygen, sunshine,
water, memory, blueberries, garlic,
recordings of Dinah Washington,
Rubenstein, and Johnny Cash,
cardamom, bookstores, a bed,
birds, and affection. Such largesse.
I’m wealthier than royalty
of previous eras, travel more
comfortably than Vikings,
Marco Polo, and Eisenhower.
I don’t have very much power,
one might allege,
but the same one might cite
my extraordinary American
imperial privilege.
Mere me, ordinary I: I
am one of the most expensive
people in history. I’ve worked,
but who hasn’t? There are a few,
I know, but for many, just
living is the hardest job of all.
A question of society
persists, is more than a
question of propriety:
how shall those who have
behave toward themselves
with regard to those who have
not or much less? Shall we bless
ourselves by making the
blessings go further, as a frugal person does
with what a frugal person has?
Or shall we condemn ourselves
by doing no good with having it good?
“Speak for yourself.” A fair point.
What is it I should
be doing to do the best with doing well?
is a question worth my asking myself.
"Shut up." Consider it done.
Hans Ostrom