About this ebook
Enjoy the ride!
Jane Mayes
About the Poet Jane (Engemann) Mayes lives on the picturesque shore of Lake Huron at the tip of the "thumb" of the Michigan "mitten". Mother of three and grandmother of six, she is a retired teacher and high school librarian with a B.A. degree in French and English from Aquinas College in Grand Rapids (1956) and an M.A. in school librarianship from Central Michigan University at Mount Pleasant (1975). Her poems have appeared in several poetry journals, anthologies and choral compositions, and have garnered some awards, most recently the Michigan Poetry Society's 2010 traveling trophy. Her newspaper column, "Lit., etc." ran for eight years in The Port Austin Times. She has written two chapbooks and a poetry collection, Seeing...Through Nature. In addition to penning poetry and memoirs, she enjoys watercolor, pottery, biking puddling around in her kayak, volunteering, not setting an alarm clock, walking in woods, pastures and on beaches, and being with family and friends -- some of whom you meet in this book. Life IS good! About the Artist An award-winning artist, Don Bullis lives between the fertile farmland of the Thumb of Michigan and the shoreline of Lake Huron, where he is know for his colorful watercolor paintings of old, abandoned cars, locks and doorknobs, old barns and lighthouses. His artistic ability was recognized at an early age. He attended Meinzinger School of Art before serving in the army. Father of seven, grandfather of fourteen plus three "greats", he was a draftsman until his retirement. Since then he has had six one-man shows and taught watercolor classes in Romeo. He currently teaches classes in Troy and Port Austin. His work may be seen at art shows in Eastern Lower Michigan and at his gallery on Grindstone Road east of Port Austin. A past president of the Thumb Area Artists of Romeo, he is past president and current board member of the Thumb Arts Guild, and one of the Bards of Bird Creek. In his travels he enjoys seeking out covered bridges and old mills to paint. To view a sample of his work, go to thumbartsguild.com/artists.
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Drawn in Dust - Jane Mayes
AuthorHouse™
1663 Liberty Drive
Bloomington, IN 47403
www.authorhouse.com
Phone: 1-800-839-8640
© 2011 Jane Mayes. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
First published by AuthorHouse 4/21/2011
ISBN: 978-1-4520-9981-1 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4520-9980-4 (hc)
ISBN: 978-1-4520-9982-8 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2010919565
Printed in the United States of America
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any Web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
Cover design and illustrations by Donald Bullis
janemayesgrey.jpgThis book is dedicated to:
Ed, who devoted his life to me, grounded me, yet gave me
freedom to fly.
Carrie, Jill and Jon, who began as our children
and evolved into my friends.
Paul and Teresa, my admired and appreciated
son- and daughter-in-loves.
Lucy, Eddie, Maxine, Haley, Henry and Ellen,
grandchildren who warm my heart and light my life.
Hub, my editor-father, who revered the printed word and never
let a typo get past him.
Julia, my mother, who was the best teacher I ever had.
Don, who shares his love of art, music and writing with me.
My friends and relatives who have raised my spirits in times
of crises and celebrated the good times.
You, the reader who has been drawn to read these poems.
Bless you all!
Acknowledgments
I wish to thank Mary Brown and Judy Beam for the many hours they devoted to critique and edit the manuscript during its preparation; Don Bullis, who produced the art work; my niece Jennifer Clark, poet and encourager; Patty Finan for her computer expertise; Betty Bond for her counsel; Enid Maxwell, now deceased, who started all this when she asked the question years ago, Why don’t you put your poems in a book?
; Chris Clancy, Ann Schwedler (now dec.) and Mary, who were three-fourths of the PMs (Post-Manuscript) poetry support group; the Bards of Bird Creek; neighbors in our village; and strangers who provided fodder for my imagination.
Table of Contents
Dedication & Acknowledgments
Beginnings
Family
Friends
Neighbors
Relationships
Love
Loss
Recovery
Drawn in Dust
Our lives are sketches drawn in the dust of time—
vignettes that capture the commonplace:
spent tea cups on the patio,
children’s laughter echoing,
a glass of cool water,
foals bucking in the meadow,
handprints on a window pane,
cracker crumbs by a favorite chair,
boots caked with mud,
sand burrs on ragg socks.
It’s the homely things after all
that are the meat of living,
that become so precious
just before they’re blown away
by the winds of life passing.
Beginnings
beginnings.jpgIn Utero
Dear little zygote
(now a cluster of cells),
you are almost nothing,
yet you are more
precious than platinum.
You have no memory
of your days-old past,
but in your being
lies the future
of your family.
Featureless now,
you will bear
the composite face
of ancestors unremembered.
It is good for you
to stay sequestered
until you develop
and we adjust, else,
in our delight
we might smother you
with our love.
No ZPG
We need babies
(babies in buntings,
babies in cribs,
babies in high chairs
drooling on bibs,
babies in playpens,
babes on the floor;
how many are there?
we need a few more!
crawling on laps,
swinging in swings)
to give hope for whatever
the future brings.
From Heaven To Heaven
Sweet child,
when I hold you near my heart
as you twizzle the hair
at the nape of my neck
before melting into sleep on my shoulder,
it’s then I get a glimpse
of the comfort and bliss of heaven.
Missing Pages
Have I betrayed you, my daughter?
You so wanted to be pregnant,
and now in your second month you ask
between green-gilled waves of nausea,
Is it worth it?
I tell you the truth:
"You were worth it,
would be worth anything
I could go through."
Later will you curse me
for what I didn’t tell:
that childbirth for me
was pelvis-splitting,
agonizing, self-exploding,
awe-filled pain
that only a human life
could be worth?
Will you forgive me, daughter?
Now as I already cherish
the growing life within you
as my own, I dread
what lies ahead for you
and tell myself that you
will birth more easily than I,
that I am just a weakling
with a low pain tolerance.
Oh, daughter, don’t hate me
for the chapter I left out.
Identity
Who are you, Lucy?
We don’t know you yet.
You haven’t told us;
but just before you smile
your eyes twinkle
like great-grampa’s
under your daddy’s eyebrows.
You listen to a distant sound
through his finely-sculpted ears
beside Grandma Grippo’s face.
Your mother’s hands,
borrowed from your matronym,
assume a ballet pose
as you relax in sleep;
and angelic eyelashes
softly rest upon your cheeks.
Uncle Jon’s inner contentment
and Grampa Mayes’ curiosity
are already imprinted; and
your legs and arms are driven
by Aunt Carrie’s passion
for activity.
But I see you and no one else
as you wrinkle your squinchy nose
before you break into a smile
and make the sun shine.
For Maxine
Before you were
I loved the possibility of your being.
Then you became,
and I marveled at your protoplasmic potential;
but your first photo at birth-minus-seven months
captivated this almost-grandmother’s heart.
As I viewed your budding form in awe,
I saw secrets unknown to previous generations.
Yet gradually grandmothers adjust—
That’s why you never read in the papers
about spontaneous heart combustion.
Ah! The Children
Cherish the children.
Listen to their babble
as if they were giving
directions to heaven.
Memorize their eager faces;
store up their happy laughter
as a substitute for sunrise
on gray mornings.
Remember the imprint
of their hand in yours
as they lead you
to limitless love.
Hold in your heart
their hope for a world
that heals its scars
with the balm of peace.
Artistic Limitations
Who can paint the wonder
that is a toddler?
Silken skin brushed
by fluttering angel wings,
cheeks the color of
pink rose petals,
eyes that reflect multitudes
of marvels in a world
completely new,
hair that’s down,
then flying up before
the brush can make its stroke,
hands that tug, and arms
that hug spontaneously.
What pigment do you use
to depict pristine purity
yet unblemished by the world?
And how do you capture
boundless enthusiasm,
bounding energy,
and contain the flow of questions
on the canvas?
Poem in Lieu of Praise
"Words! Words!
Words float around in the air!
MONEY you can hold in your pocket!" *
So don’t THANK me,
PAY me;
and I’ll take the money and sock it.
Or, better yet,
I’ll SPEND it
on a record, book, or locket;
and when it’s all gone,
I’ll take something I bought,
and go right out and hock it!
*Jill, age 5
Our Children
Fresh, unique…
something of their father,
something like their mother,
yet not a combination,
but a new creation
with new interests, new ideas,
thinking their own thoughts,
seeing the world differently,
following their own stars,
charting new courses,
planting their flags
on challenging mountains,
slaying different dragons.
Our children—
fresh, unique.
Birthday Poem
Should I design a card for thee,
it would surely show a tree
standing green and straight and tall
over heads and shoulders all,
with needles softened by compassion,
seeds within the cones all fashioned
by love and goodness – ready to grow
when planted by the son we know.
Saints Alive!
Did the baby Jesus squirm and wriggle,
play a prank on patient Joseph,
dimples denting, hide and seek,
tug at Mary’s veil, then giggle?
I like to think that he was normal
for a boy of flesh and form.
If intellect sires sense of humor,
why are icons all so formal?
A statue with that vapid stare
and ever-somber piety
mirrors more the artist’s nature
than that of child caught unaware.
Just for a realistic style
I’d like to see religious art
project a hint of happy heaven,
with at least an upturned smile.
Remember?
I don’t remember…
being on that heavenly cloud
where babies wait to be conceived,
or when, where, or how it happened;
although I figured it out much later—
or rocking in that placental sea
for nine months while I waited to be born.
I don’t remember my birth, either—
ejected against my will as
I struggled, gasping