2003  Lois Cranston Memorial Poetry Prize First Place

 

If I Called You River     by Alison Townsend

If I called you river and straddled

the silky muscles of your passing.

If you called me river and pulled me to you, swimming

in the silky, silver pull of my legs.

If I wove myself around you, sweet

and sinuous as water itself, as the call

of the redwing floating toward you now from the cattails.

If you slid beside me, sleek and playful

as the otter careening down his muddy ride

in one long breath before he caresses the water.

If I caressed you back, reflecting sunlight,

reflecting wingspan of hovering red-tailed hawk

reflecting the tenderness with which light

is received always by water.

If you were water entering water.

If we flowed that way for a long time,

distinct but inseparable, the glinting

flecks of silica from your sediments mixing

with the sun-sparked mica of mine.

If the spring rains came, pushing us hard and fast,

from our home in the mountains.

If I had known high water and times of flood,

the edge of me lapping, leaving a birth-scar

along a line of rain-drenched trees.

If you had known those times too,

your calm surface churned into a wall

of water pulled, root to stem, stem to leaf,

leaf to air where it balances for a moment,

quivers, and falling, begins again.

If I was a river you had never seen

but had dreamed of forever.

If you were a river I could taste in my sleep.

If even in winter we kept moving together,

meeting in secret beneath our glassy quilt.

If everything is season and snowmelt.

If everything is release and return, (no stanza break)

the peppered foam of frog spawn

and the salmon’s muscular

silver thrust.

If I called you river.

If you called me river.

If the river knew anything more

than this sweet braiding and undoing of water,

that feeds everything

and yearns for everything and is,

in its rushing, everything the river can know.

If the river knew.

If river were ever possible to contain.

If the heart were, and the blood, and the body,

this human urge to name things

by things other than what they are.

I name you river.

I name myself river.

I name what we are together river

carving a channel between the grassy banks,

leading us

to the open mouth,

the salty swallow,

the deep, green voice of the sea

that cries out so far within us

I cannot tell if it is you who cries out or me.

Alison Townsend

 

Alison Townsend is the author of the chapbook, What the Body Knows (Parallel Press, 2002) and the poetry book, The Blue Dress (White Pine, 2003). She teaches English, creative writing, and women’s studies at the University of Wisconsin, Whitewater, and at her women’s writing workshop, In Our Own Voices.

2003 Lois Cranston Memorial Poetry Prize Finalist

 

On Guard, In Moonlight                  by Mary Makofske

 

The full moon rises through a net of trees

just beginning to bud, both leaves and flowers

knotted black against varying shades of dark.

A man shifts the weight of his rifle,

knowing the ghost light makes any motion

in the woods more visible, as it makes

him more visible, on guard at the edge

of his sleeping comrades. Perhaps he does

not think any more about it, has no

memories strung to the white stone that rolls

through the sky. Perhaps it becomes the face

of a girl, bruised by his fist, or by his loss

to war. It’s a dead rock, space garbage

caught by accident in our orbit, he does not

even know the myths it trails, but the sea

leans toward its blank eye, and his eye

wanders to that hole like the entryway

of a bullet, because there is nothing

else to see in the darkness, no one to shoot.

 

 

 

2003 Lois Cranston Memorial Poetry Prize Finalist

 

Inquisition                                  by Shia Shabazz Barnett

 

1.

What are they doing?

 

My daughter, a demi Me

veiled in the midnight of her father’s skin

the quiet seriousness of his eyes

has questioned the world since

her evulsion from the womb.

Today, she gawks at a couple

thrice her age and height

lips lapping lips

heads gyrating

tongues tossing

from mouth to mouth.

 

The lovers whittle themselves into a bench

like loud graffiti

oblivious to my daughter

oblivious to the court of food around them

abuzz in neon

aromas that tempt the starving

as they pass dazed

like carousel figures.

The lovers devour each other over cold pizza crust and

sweating cups of super-sized soda.

 

It’s not polite to stare. Sweetie.

 

II.

 

They’re kissing, she finally utters.

 

I want to shield her from hot and heavy

while she’s still lukewarm and light

drop an ice cube in the tall glass of heat

she gulps in their spectacle.

 

I push forward the steaming bowl of rice

she’d pleaded for moments before

I want to lightly season her meal with mild

salt and pepper dashes

spoon feed her digestible

mother-to-daughter morsels

of honeyed birds and bees

But the couple, thrice her age and height

(no stanza break)

lips lapping lips

heads gyrating

tongues tossing

from mouth to mouth

don’t let me.

 

My daughter becomes marionette

her gaze, the strings

reflexive mimic of their movement.

 

Her eyes blink heavy, lethargic with copycat lust

her moistening mouth opens and closes

her head tilts, turns in soft, broken rhythms.

 

I know. Now eat.

 

III.

 

Do you ever kiss daddy like that?

 

Yes, I want to tell her.

We used to kiss like that all the time.

 

I want to tell her we kissed.

            When my daddy wasn’t looking

            When it rained

            After a fight

            Before we made love

            When we heard good news

            When we heard bad news

            When slow songs came on

            When fast songs ended

            In cars

            At movies

            But never too much in public

            Before you

            After your brother

            While you were asleep

            And your dreams kept your eyes from noticing.

            Before bills, the economy and war.

 

I want to tell her yes

but I don’t know how.

I was never taught

to be honest about loving.

 

I look at the couple

lips lapping lips

heads gyrating

tongues tossing

from mouth to mouth

 

love making love

and answer

 

Yes, I have.