Other Places,
Other Times

Adventuring in Italy
At evening near Assisi,
we pick our way carefully
through neat crop rows
and over low fences
toward a hilltop town.
Escaping a nondescript hotel,
and its busload of fellow travelers,
we find our own dinner and memories
after rousing the surprised owner
of a sleepy trattoria.
At ease with youth and pleasure,
we savor piquant details,
praise the hearty local food, and
return holding hands in the dark,
staggered with happiness.
A Green State of Mind
Mexico for instance, seen from the air,
crossing over land, heading toward Cancun. It is
a nubbly green carpet stretching to the horizon
without a town, a road or a building visible.
Or, seen from an air-conditioned bus kilometer after
kilometer on the drive to Chichen Itza from Cancun,
the green is like two walls pressing in on both sides
that might easily close over and bury the road.
Or it might be the green of crocodiles in Nichupte Lagoon
waiting patiently in the murky shallows near the shore
for prey they might latch on to and drag under water,
perhaps, if lucky, the occasional hapless tourist.
And always it is the sea's band of light green nearest shore
modulating to darker bands as the eye scans outward toward
where turtles, returning from thousand-kilometer journeys,
will emerge to deposit their eggs on beaches shared with bathers.
It is the plants in Chapultepec Park's Botanic Gardens
watched over by bees made of braided twigs and vines.
Other colors, an occasional, white, red or purple appear here
only as embellishments that green produces to adorn itself.
Finally, it is the green of the sacred maize that nourished alike
the makers of jade masks, stepped pyramids and stone heads.
It is the green grass of the ball courts where teams competed
and the earth drank the red blood of those who won.
The family in Naples, Italy
spread across the entrance of a narrow side street
are friendly at first, smiling to me striding by.
Several grimy children run over to cavort beside me.
A large seated man (the father?) waves me over.
But I wave, smile and walk on.
Their curses and some small rocks now hurled at
my back as I hurry toward the bay gleaming below
there to mentally wash away this unintended insult
and lay down this most vivid memory of Naples.
Sakhumi 1967
(Assembled from an account in
Ryszard Kapucscinski's The Shadow
of the Sun)
In the modern city of palm trees and bougainvillea,
close beside the ruins of an ancient Greek colony,
some of it on land and some sunk beneath the sea,
a hungry traveler dines in a restaurant built on rocks
that plunge like divers headlong into the Black Sea
and watches fat and lazy fish navigate underwater streets.


One for the road
In this color summer photo
a brown dirt road spills down
from a low hill at the horizon
to fan out and fill the lower frame.
At the center of this country road
a brown splayed and flattened form
with only two boots in high relief that
identify the remains of a Russian soldier
outside a village somewhere in Ukraine.
Rooms
She claimed she didn't remember me,
how I helped her get here to escape gambling debts,
or how, to heal my heartbreak, she taught me to dance.
That night, after she drank too much,
I brought her safely to her hotel room.
The next day I returned there and asked for her.
The clerk said there was no Lulu in that room.
There had been a Mimi in that room, but she had left.
Later, I learned that a jealous boyfriend killed her there.
But I prefer to imagine her transforming into a white crane
that flew away to live in a perfect upper world.
I asked for that room. The manager said it needed to be redecorated.
Intending to occupy it when ready, I moved into a neighboring room.
There, through the thin walls between the rooms, I listened
to the manager's elder daughter in Lulu's emptied room
as she obsessively rehearsed conversations with an absent lover
her heels clicking on the wood as she turned in small circles
repeating herself as troubled people in love sometimes do.
To me, as she paces she is a leopard gradually shedding its spots
finally becoming wholly white and solely good.