Category: Selected Poems

  • Back to where we belong

    We’ve lived a week of wisdom teeth
    My lovely 20-year-old in her little girl white bed
    A child for one short week
    sleeps badly, faints from too many painkillers

    We savour rich chocolate ice cream, very strawberry gelato
    make chicken soup from scratch
    mash potatoes ’till they squish

    Pale-faced, cheeks puffed out to shame a chipmunk
    she loves the comfort
    Silly movies absorb long afternoons
    Small, slow smiles sneak into her repetoire

    Then, as the worst winter storm ices barren branches
    she packs frozen mini meals, antibiotics just-in-case
    I wave her out the door, into a car that whisks her from me

    After she’s sheltered in the crook of my arm
    I should be thrilled she’s okay
    Instead I turn from the window

    Hold my own hand

    JC Sulzenko

  • A Poet @ the Festival

    for John Newlove

    The first time I saw you, heard you read
    I found you old beyond your years
    to my surprise

    You wore your frailty poorly –
    the timbre of your voice, your hands
    trembling as leaves must before they fall

    I wished youd let me stand behind you
    place my arms under your arms
    my hands under your hands

    We would be strong together
    and it would look as though your hands
    turned the pages with ease as you read

    But I would not speak for you

    No, your words are…well…
    yours to say as long as you can
    and then for us to read to ourselves

    alone

    JC Sulzenko

  • Urban Triptych

    I

    A yellow canoe
    against the red brick wall
    promises
    early morning
    upon a quiet lake

    II

    By the side of the highway
    where kids with knapsacks thumb rides to God-knows-where,
    only bottled water(unopened), a ripe banana(intact),
    and a container with green grapes(washed)
    remain

    III

    The heady scent of sweet lilacs
    cannot dispel the image, mask the sound
    of a crows harsh beak devouring
    a black fledgling
    and its cries

    JC Sulzenko