Torohill

Page 1

Also by Donna Reis

poetry

No Passing Zone

Certain Dog Shows and Church: A Sequence of Poems

Incantations

nonfiction

Seeking Ghosts in the Warwick Valley: 60 Personal Accounts

editor

Blues for Bill: A Tribute to William Matthews

Torohill
Poetry
deerbrook editions
Donna Reis

published by

Deerbrook Editions

P.O. Box 542

Cumberland, ME 04021

www.deerbrookeditions.com

preview cataloque: www.issuu.com/deerbrookeditions

first edition © 2022 by Donna Reis

All rights reserved

ISBN: 979-8-9865052-1-3

Book design by Jeffrey Haste

Cover art: Catskill–December, painting by David H. Drake, used with premission from the artist www.davidhdrake.com

For Tom, again, and always, and for my father, Reverend Harry A. Reis

Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror. Just keep going. No feeling is final. Don’t let yourself lose me.

Nearby is the country they call life. You will know it by its seriousness.

Give me your hand.—Rilke

Contents Shoes 13 I Mexican Standoff 17 Boy Left 18 Please Forward 19 Learning to Sail 20 Penile Dementia 21 Suspect 22 How Do You Like Them Apples 23 Screening 24 Dawn 25 Egg in a Basket, Bird in a Nest, Toad in a Hole 26 Excelsior 27 Could Have 28 Amber Bottles 29 II Botched Job 33 The Reverend’s Irreverent Daughter 36 To John Berryman, Who Would Have Turned 100 This Year 37 Purgatory 38 Waste Not, Want Not 39 Festival of Broken Needles 40 My Father Invents an Alternate Life 41 Portal 42 God’s Shepherd 43 III Torohill 47 Letter to Jane Kenyon 48 Doting 49 The Adirondacks 50 Grey Rock, Squirrel Island 51 Ocean Grove, New Jersey 52 Last Night 53
IV Miracle Whip & Woolite 57 Our Forlorn Hope 58 Orientation 59 Answering Machine 69 You’ve Left 61 Placemats 62 Great Horned Owls 63 Epilogue The Hill 66 Notes and Dedications 69 Acknowledgments 70 About the Author 71 About the Artist 72
Torohill

Shoes

On the icy-black ocean floor lie hundreds of shoes, some side by side as if slipped off before bed, others akimbo, searching for their mates, while some sleep on their sides with children’s lace-ups in tow. Wing tips who lost their spats retrace their steps. High-button, heeled boots still try to run; spectators sneer Floozies; married shoes whisper, You never left me. Torn soles of bellhops, cooks, maids and machinists— row after row, so still, still there.

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I
. . . like I was an orphan shoe from the lost and found always missing the other.
Mary Chapin Carpenter

Mexican Standoff

I. August, 1973

When my father went to Mexico to coax Mom back, she sent him home with a peasant dress to give me in her place.

Full-length bleached muslin, satin stitched red, purple, orange and coral flowers with green leaves and stems blooming across its yoke.

An embroidered repeat of bouquets tied in yellow ribbons spilled down its front separated by two love birds—

one blue and red, one fuchsia and red. I hung it in my closet to admire, afraid I’d betray my father if I wore it.

II. June, 1974

Your chariot awaits you, Tiger, my doctor grinned, I’ve arranged for an ambulance to bring you to your graduation. My father and godmother

slipped the embroidered shift over my sutured belly, fractured pelvis and casted legs, like Disney birds dressing Cinderella. Anxious I’d ruin my dress or the day, I squelched throwing-up throughout the jostling ride. At the football field, they lifted me into a wheelchair and wheeled me

to the stage where my father gave the benediction, as the principal lowered a basket of flowers onto my lap. The student body stood

and applauded. Two plaster feet peered from the dress’s hem like white doves, legs elevated like wings.

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Boy Left For Nicky

There he was at the high school reunion the boy Ellen and I left in a tree fifty years ago. Who let you down? He said we were mean. But men climbed us like ladders and left us, their rough workmen’s hands sent us higher and higher, past the underside of leaves toward the sky.

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It’s not our parting I grieve, but that you’re the only one who remembers my last summer of innocence, of dumb omnipotence, my body unmarred. Nixon’s wiretaps were still under wraps. The Vietnam War limped on for another year. You remember how we drove backroads in your blue Duster swaying to Janis and Big Brother. I loved how you hugged the curves, steering one-handed. You liked how I knew every car-make by its grill and headlights even in the dark. How I beamed when you predicted I’d make a good car mechanic’s wife.

I never told you how three months after our last date, grills and headlights took on a different meaning when I was struck hitchhiking by a hit and run driver. Months later, I wrote what happened. The letter was returned, and the postal clerk who answered my call lamented Oh Honey, I’m so sorry, we had a fire awhile back and lost all our forwarding addresses.

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Please Forward

Learning to Sail

When our poetry teacher said Learn to sail, I heard Learn to fail, a course I would have aced. I failed math so badly I was given a rolled, blank paper at my graduation.

When learning to meditate, I blurted I masturbated this morning! It wasn’t even true.

I’ve said pummel when I meant plummet, forsaken instead of forgiven, misgiven for mistaken, spring instead of fall. And once I said hate when I meant love.

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Penile Dementia

If I said I still remember the sound of your breath when you moan, I know you wouldn’t believe me.

I still feel the blades of your pelvic bones, the hollows below your hips sculpted so I can pull you deeper.

If I recall your brother’s name and your mother’s maiden name, you’d suspect me of stalking. I think you already do. How is it you don’t remember my name?

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Suspect

You need proof I’m not a hoax, ask a clue question to see if I’m password admittable. I don’t mention your birthmark, that cinder flying across the cerulean of your eye. I’m certain you don’t remember the wine stain claiming my neck. Maybe I was unfair to materialize you from memory. I see that now as you brush grey matter from your sleeves, blinking in harsh sunlight, muttering, Why me? Why now?

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How Do You Like Them Apples

or Stick that in your pipe and smoke it were often tacked on for extra punctuation. Other mothers might ask, When are you gonna wake up and fly right, while mine said, When are you gonna wake up and die right?

Moments of vanity and satisfaction were sneered at: Get off your high horse, or Aren’t you just the bee’s knees?

Compliments were doled out when hell froze over. But mostly I let her locution roll off my back, because I had a brain like a sieve and would have lost my head if it wasn’t screwed on tight, while Mother hurled idioms with artistry, always hitting the nail on the head, the final one in our coffins.

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Screening

Before Mike bought The Nite Owl, he owned The Kelpie, a couple of blocks uptown. He was married then— to a blonde, pretty enough to be a Bond girl. Maybe her name was Ursula or Kierstin. Summers, we’d watch her drive up and down Windermere Avenue in her black Jaguar.

One night, she invited Sean Meaney off our corner to her bedroom. Mike left the bar and clamored upstairs early. Hearing him coming, Sean dove through the window, leaving the broken screen leaning against the clapboards long after The Kelpie went under. Sometimes, I want to go back just to see if the screen is still there.

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For Jimbo

Eight litters in five years, one crooked eye, teats enlarged and pendulous, not the feathery Golden Retriever of my dreams, but our eyes locked. I wasn’t leaving her with the breeder who was dumping Dawn

at six years old. I brought her to college classes, the library, friends’ homes for dinner. Some asked me to leave her outside, where she’d dutifully wait on the stoop. When I returned, she’d bark her bliss, take my hand in her mouth,

pull me to the car saying, You’re mine, all mine. She also was a primal huntress of woodchucks. She’d pounce, shake the backs of their necks till they dangled lifeless. My boyfriend, a bit basic himself,

announced that tanned breasts excited him. Eager to please, I bared my body to afternoon sun in a clearing in the woods. Dawn came and went snuffling possibilities—then returned plopping her kill at my feet.

The woodchuck came to life and charged. Dawn watched me scramble over stones, breasts jostling through briars, as I ran for my life, then soared like an arrow to save me.

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Dawn

Notes and Dedication

A note about “Shoes”: Filmmaker, James Cameron, who produced and directed the movie, “The Titanic,” visited the Titanic wreck 33 times. He reported, “We’ve seen shoes (on the ocean floor around the wreck), which strongly suggest there was a body there at one point.”

The quote on page 11, “. . . like an orphan shoe from the lost and found always missing the other,” by Mary Chapin Carpenter is from her song, John Doe, No. 24.

The poem “Botched Job” is for Jim Delahanty.

The poem “Portal” describes the mansion that presided over Torohill Farm before it burned down.

The quote on page 33, “Just last week, nearly three years since you flew from your miserable, precious body, I buried my face in your ties,” is from Naomi Shihab Nye’s poem, “Mom Gives Away Your Ties,” from her book, Transfer, 2011, BOA Editions, Ltd.

The epigraph in “Torohill” is from the book Rebecca, by Daphne DuMaurier, Avon Books, 1938.

The epigraph written for “Letter to Jane Kenyon,” is “You always belonged here. I’m the one who worries if I fit in with the furniture and the landscape.” Written by Jane Kenyon from her poem, “Here,” from her book Otherwise, New and Selected Poems, 1996, Graywolf Press.

“Ocean Grove, New Jersey” is for Tom.

“Our Forlorn Hope” is the title of one of Tom’s songs on his CD, On the Plains.

I am grateful to Jeanne Marie Beaumont, Wyn Cooper, Mary Louise Kiernan, Janet Hamill, Amy Holman, April Ossmann and Estha Weiner and especially to my blessed husband, Tom Miller, for all their fabulous editorial advice

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Acknowledgments

Anti-Heroin Chic, “God’s Shepherd.”

Atlanta Review, “Ocean Grove, New Jersey,” & “Doting.”

Cimarron Review, “Orientation.”

Delmarva Review, “Learning to Sail,” & “Dawn.”

Evening Street Review, “My Father’s Alternate Life.”

Furious Gazelle, “Dawn.”

Mudfish, “Letter to Jane Kenyon.”

OxMag, “Shoes.”

The Same, “Egg in a Basket, Bird in a Nest, Toad in a Hole,” “To John Berryman Who Would Have Turned 100 This Year.”

Sheila-Na-Gig, “Mexican Standoff,” “Portal,” “The Last Night.”

Verse-Virtual, “Excelsior,” “The Hill,” “Botched Job,” “How Do You Like Them Apples,” “Grey Rock, Squirrel Island,” “Mexican Standoff,”“Learn to Sail,” “Miracle Whip & Woolite,” “Our Forlorn Hope,” “Please Forward,” “The Festival of Broken Needles.”

“The Adirondacks,” & “Torohill” were previously published in No Passing Zone, Deerbrook Editions (December 2012).

“Doting,” “Learn to Sail,” “Letter to Jane Kenyon,” & “Ocean Grove, New Jersey,” were read on the Joe Dans Morning Show at WTBQ, 93.5 FM & 1110 AM in Warwick, New York.

Many poems in this collection were read on The Visionary Woman Tarot Radio Show with Kristine and Shotsie Gorman at KSVY, 91.3 FM in Sonoma, California.

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Anthologies:

Poetry In Performance # 43, “To John Berryman Who Would Have Turned 100 This Year.” (The City College of New York, 2015).

About the Author

Donna Reis is the author of two full length poetry collections: Torohill (Deerbrook Editions, 2022) and No Passing Zone (Deerbrook Editions, 2012), which was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. She is co-editor and contributor to the anthology, Blues for Bill: A Tribute to William Matthews (The University of Akron Press, 2005). Her non-fiction book, Seeking Ghosts in the Warwick Valley: 60 Personal Accounts (Schiffer Publishing, Ltd., 2003) has sold nearly 3000 copies. She has written three poetry chapbooks: Certain (Finishing Line Press, 2012); Dog Shows and Church: A Sequence of Poems (2000) and Incantations (1995) both published by Eurydice Press. Her work has appeared in numerous journals including Atlanta Review, Cimarron Review and Delmarva Review. Reis has been published in more than ten anthologies, most recently CAPS Poetry 2020: 20th Anniversary (Caps Press, 2020); Coffee Poems, Reflections on Life with Coffee (World Enough Writers, 2019); Local News: Poetry about Small Towns (MWPH Books, 2019). She received her Master of Science Degree in Education from Hunter College, The City University of New York, in 1986. A student of the late William Matthews, she completed her Master of Arts Degree in Creative Writing at The City College, City University of New York, in 2002.

Reis was born in Greenwich, Connecticut and grew up in Greenwood Lake, New York. She was married to the late musician and composer, Tom Miller. She has taught poetry workshops at The Northeast Poetry Center, College of Poetry and the Albert Wisner library in Warwick, New York. She is an avid quilter and now lives in New York’s Hudson Valley with her dog, Phoebe and her cats, Peekamoose and Pud-Tud.

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About the Artist

David H. Drake of Catskill, New York, received his Bachelor of Fine Arts in printmaking with a minor in photography from the Cleveland Institute of Art where he studied with Carroll Cassil, Ralph Woehrmann and Robert Jergens. After graduating, he taught photography in Cleveland public schools and began a lifelong practice of painting and drawing.

Drake’s work is represented in private and corporate collections throughout the country. Previous solo exhibitions include Davis Orton Gallery, Hudson, New York and Cabane Gallery, Phoenicia, New York. Among the galleries he has exhibited at are the Maryland Federation of Art, Annapolis, Maryland; Neville-Sargent Gallery, Chicago, Illinois; and Southern Vermont Art Center, Manchester, Vermont.

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