2005 LOIS CRANSTON MEMORIAL POETRY PRIZE AWARD
Oil on Canvas, circa 1825
Not easy to be unlovely,
to have a nose that meets the world
like a plow blade
sharp enough to cut through soil heavy
with clay, sturdy enough to shove fist-
sized stones from the furrows;
to know the frills of lace
around your face cannot soften the lines
of your majestic prow.
The irony of your blossom-
shaped bonnet is not lost upon you;
you know you are
no rose. There are no rings
on your fingers, no children dressed
like small adults posing
beside you, their hands
obediently laid against your knee.
What happiness?
In your hand, a leather-bound book
with gilded pages; in your pocket,
the key to your front door.
Patricia Hale
Patricia Hale has promoted rabbit raising in the Philippines, performed honeybee disease research in Wyoming, and appeared in two Indian movies. She earned an M.A. in English literature and briefly taught composition to college freshman. She lives with her son in Connecticut where she makes her living as a corporate information technology professional and occasional freelance reference book editor. She is devoted to the craft and practice of poetry and has just recently started sending her work for publication. Her poetry is published in the Owen Wister Review.