The following poem was published on The Community Storyboard way back in June 2013. I confess this re-post is in part because I’m at a loss for new material. The well runneth dry at the moment. But another reason is because I’m preparing to take a free online class on how to write poetry. The course is through the University of Iowa International Writing Program. You can find more information about by clicking here.
This poem is in memory of Wendy Bishop. She was my mentor when I began my master’s in English program back in 1990. I had a teaching assistantship and she was director of the teaching program, so we had frequent meetings. I recognized a kindred spirit in her: we had both lived on the West Coast, we both had liberal views relative to those in the region where we now lived, we were close in age, and we were introverts. But I was intimidated by the depth and breadth of her ever-growing portfolio and shied away at times when I should have been close at her heels. We kept in touch off and on over the years until she died from leukemia at the young age of 50, in November 2003. She was always incredibly busy, but always, always smiling and writing.
I miss her still.
***
They laid their hands side by side
She marveled
At how much alike they were
The one near death
The other nearest life
The one near death
Burned bright
With beach-bleached hair
Sandy skin
A smile an ocean-wide
She burned bright
And hummed through
Dot-matrix printers and laserjets
A low constant hum of life in words
Paper cascading from their mouths
Laid end to end they would circle the earth
And wrap it tight like a silk girdle
She burned bright
Writing more in her one-half-century
Than most could have written in two
She burned bright
The one near death
And marveled at her daughter’s hands, so like her own
She burned . . .
. . . out
And grown men cried
And grown women sighed
And I
who so wanted to be like her, she who burned bright
Stopped breathing
***