March 2017
Laurie Byro
philbop@warwick.net
philbop@warwick.net
In 1985, while pursuing a business degree, I unhappily landed in a creative writing class and announced to the group that I thought Walt Whitman was a chain of schools throughout the United States. To my astonishment, I had found my pacing, abandoned prose, and started a poetry circle that has been meeting for 16 years. I have published three poetry collections, most recently: “Wonder” Little Lantern Press (out of Wales). https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=Laurie+Byro I am the Poet in Residence at the West Milford Township Library and despite it all, love New Jersey, and have lived here almost 60 years
.
.
"Southeast Lighthouse" by Michael Byro
Southeast Lighthouse Stairs, Block Island
From the north the winds lie long and light slants
differently this time. I stick October into a socket of bone,
readjust its broken arm. I howl beside the goldenrod
along these cliffs, startle finches into flight. Ragged
feather dusters of cattails rove between their shoulders.
The air is yellowed with dust. I carry all of her there, a mosaic
of stones and fragments of bones, a skeleton key
with no door to open. She is the lazy strain of lost shells,
the deep green and copper rust of the body. Climbing
down nine flights of stairs, sometimes chasing the light
I lay her down among the tall grass. She is the flinty spark
off a match I cannot strike. A gingham dog tears at my father's
hand, laps his last slurp of water. I lie to the man who wants her
ashes to mingle with his. I tell him I have saved all of her
for him. I want the sea to take back all of my mistakes. Carved
and thick as a pane of old glass the tide sweeps
the beach. It picks through stones with crooked fingers of salt.
The tide, they tell me, will be coming in soon.
This has been published in Luna
© 2017 Laurie Byro
Editor's Note: If this poem(s) moves you please consider writing to the author (email address above) to tell him or her. You might say what it is about the poem that moves you. Writing to the author is the beginning of community at Verse Virtual. It is very important. -FF