Saturday, November 5, 2022

Jay Stafinak : Three poems

 

 

 

 

 

Pomegranates

                         for the peoples of SSSUUUFFF

Lovers,

deboned by hot wind,

jellied with afternoon swim, halve

a coppery pomegranate, lamenting their

flesh grown weary with sun. Lustrous wavers

in the light anneal from off the late evening lake. 

Saturnine but desperate, they savour each bite

while revival teems from their glistening chins.

They yark down their nest of sleeping bags

from the willows as the heavens seep in

to the purple spectrum and they join

that dizzying binary code

of the whirling 

mOOn.


 

For Sophia

The T.A. at the high school talks about you, Sophia,
and your Hot Rods munching husband is my Uncle Steve.
Easy to see there’s no ring on your finger - we’re not surprised.

The keyboard-trace that he caught you by, confirming
your love to this Lieutenant Nevsky in the Donbas,

bums out the family softball team. Granny is broke
from the stagette she threw for you in Minnetonka.

We would agree, Steve is no Astro Engineer
from Belarusian State, but he’s a solid contractor

who built you that two story only this fall. You appeared
first in a thumbnail gallery with asymmetrical hair.
 

Then donning your poses with those Grizzley cubs –
he wanted you, he told us at the water tower retrofit,
more than those hussies from Herzegovina. Your origin

story felt greater than our own: Black Sea violinist,
your thesis on Drahomanov, the middle daughter

of a sturgeon fisherman – then the seven months
wait for your papers to clear when I saw your boobs before

I knew you. Uncle Steve and you looked permanent
until that after-party Aunt Doreen discovered you

in the computer room listening to Gopnik Deep Trance,
crying over those poems emailed by Nevsky.
 

I heard that fight: he bugging you about the Ruskies
in Rambo, his blubbery take on the sub commander:
you screaming how you always hated BBQ;

the same week he burst in the teacher’s lounge
demanding you write down your computer passwords.

Is it true he wouldn’t help you look for your brooch
on the Astroturf? Is it true that he scoffed at your poem

about torchlit processions worshipping in sea caves
in the Town Coffee News? Sophia I long to nose

my Chevette to the double garage where you bunk
on a rusty cot stripped of your electronics.

 

 

Catfish,
            
after Ovid

                   Other creatures after
         
their various kinds shot
forth from earth with sudden combustion.

         
Lingering moisture
opened in the sun, and the heat made

          
the mud in the water-logged
marshes swell and expand. Seeds of animal life
|
          
were hatched in the mother’s womb of earth-
making soil, which engendered them, hatching

            
in course of time
to the forms of the distinct species. Such 

            
as we observe when
the Red overflows its banks, leaving muggy

            
deported clay to bake hot
in the sunshine. Farmers turning clods

            
with their vapour trails,
discover a horde of new creatures, a fish

         
     with whiskers, poised
on the threshold of diving into the dirty

              
runnels,
                       
while others flop, unformed

               
wiggling without pause:
these catfish sometimes appear

               
adorned in racy teddies,
some parts exposed, but most

                
composed with cut and paste.                

 

 

 

 

Jay Stafinak: a half-breed, Sixties-Scooped, bastard poet wandering through Winnipeg's Crown, Seven Oaks, the surging homeland of the mighty Red River Metis. His book, Night Became Years, was nominated for the Governor General Award, the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award, the Eileen McTavish Sykes Award, and the Carol Shields Winnipeg Book Award. He is the Recipient of the 2015 Bliss Carmen Award for Poetry. Recently one of his poems was published - as a Baconian Cypher - for Brock University's Small Walker Press. He writes poems and helps raise his three daughters while studying medicines throughout the bushes of Pilot Mound. Every day he raises his glass in memory of Steven Heighton.  

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