Showing posts with label Florida vacation Kathy Craig's poem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florida vacation Kathy Craig's poem. Show all posts

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Vacation observations and poems

by Pat Laster

While vacationing in the Florida panhandle, I did two things for the first time in my seventy-something years: I ate classic Eggs Benedict and drank a pint of raspberry-tinged ale. Not on the same day, you understand.
Friday, the first full day, 7:50 am on the deck with coffee. A Mom and small boy—she with a cooler and a racket, he with a zippered racket following docilely. Here they come back. Was the tennis court “temporarily” closed, like the pool?
A hot-rodding, old-model convertible passes, noisy even from this distance. A local insulation installer leaves in a logoed panel truck. And there goes another business man carrying only a satchel.
Here they go again—the mom carrying only a racket, the son lugging both the water jug & his racket. The boy walks back toward this building, his Athletics hat nearly covering his eyes. The mother seems to be looking for a way into the tennis area. Now, the boy follows behind a maintenance man who will be “fixing” the problem. Sounds like one needs a code to open the tennis courts gate, too. Whatever he did must have worked—they are on the court and the employee is ambling back to his post/ area.
NOW, the brassy blonde mother, also brassy voiced, is teaching Son how to play tennis. That’ll drive me inside: I don’t need a human voice to adulterate the doves’ sounds. I will read Kathy Craig’s poetry book, Kindling. Her mother, Pat Craig of Bismarck, gave her poet friends copies of her daughter’s first collection. Kathy lives in the Raleigh-Durham area.
From inside, I see that the tennis lesson is over. A poem comes to mind, thence to the journal: Tennis/ lesson over. / I can resume my seat/ in the warming sea-air breeze of/ the Gulf.
Back out on the deck, I continue reading Kingling. One of Kathy’s poems, “Loss” hits a chord with me. I reprint it here:
“I had two ceramic terriers once, / Both fit in one palm. / They stood guard/ on my cherry dresser, / the one my mother had as a girl.//
“I never played with them––/ they were just for show. / Yet I kept them/ all through the years. / Now I don’t know how/ or when they disappeared, / like the last pages of childhood.”
That poignant poem engendered my own reminiscences about something I lost. “Whatever Happened to...?”
“As a young wife,/babe in arms,/I visited my first flea market./A green frosted-glass/ perfume set/captivated me./Mine now, I determined/to decorate our room/with purples, greens and blues/even going so far/ as to create a baby quilt/in those colors.//
“That’s as far as my project/went. Except it began a life-long/love of frosted-satin glass.
Whatever happened/to the green perfume bottles? Whatever happened/ to the life I once had?”
As many times as we moved from 1960 till 1980, it is no wonder the velvety glass bottles disappeared. But I still have the baby quilt. Somewhere.
I’m off again, but only to Los Indios Escapes in Cherokee Village. See you soon with more stories.

c 2011 Pat Laster, author of A Journey of Choice, dba lovepat press