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Annie Woodford

Three Poems by Annie Woodford

November 19, 2015

Errancy

 

It’s a long way to Hazard...

 

When I first read Don Quixote,

I was young. I felt sorry for the old man.

These days, I admire the generosity,

The glancing blow of his madness

And wonder how close I am

To his grace when I ride my bike

On busy streets, SUVs bearing down on me.

All I can do is pedal harder and pray.

Some days the world is transfigured

As I ride into an endless horizon,

Each branch and blade and grimy scrap

Turned sacred, eternal, humming with love.

I chant the chorus of “Nine Pound Hammer”

As I’m left in the whisk of passing cars,

I’m sure I look a raveled fool.

I grin into the wind and figure

There is nothing to be done but wink,

Hold one’s breath, and submit.

 

 

110 Beats (Fern Hill at the Skating Rink)

 

Queen’s “Another One Bites the Dust” has close to 110 beats per minute, and is therefore sometimes used to teach the rhythm of chest compressions for CPR.

 

Prisms spin in the hardwood floor.

My daughter glides and chops, skate-shod,

Her little girl legs a perfection of knees and narrow thighs.

 

The latest songs of yearning pulse around us,

As in my own days of weightlessness

At Air’s Skating Rink, where Freddy Mercury sang

 

And angels were centerfolds endlessly unfolding cashmere wings.

Air’s was all wooden. It was golden. It was timber.

The building, like the hull of a great boat or swan’s wide breast,

 

Was torn down years ago, the old boards scrapped

Despite thousands of lively nights.

These days the children wear rollerblades,

 

Float sideways in a way we never could.

The smallest kids, though, are still the fastest,

Taking the curves with crisscrossed legs,

 

Fingers almost brushing the floor,

Like my friend Lynn, who would slip ahead,

Carried by his own built up speed― slender, slouching,

 

His baggy clothes and brown hair rippled with flight.

I look for him in the children going round and round.

They flow around me like water, like airy spirits

 

And I think of my friend in his grave.

Then I put one clumsy foot

In front of the other and give chase to my daughter.

 

 

Wide Enough Spaces

 

I know a field

Between mall and church

Where mown grass

Lay in golden mounds.

Dandelions lifted into the air,

The day’s long light

Caught in their halos.

We ran bases

Almost lost to weeds,

My four-year-old daughter

Leaping home,

Her shadow dancing Dark beside her.

Then she was five,

Then eight.

One day, an orange shape

In distant thicket—

A plastic Jack-O-Lantern,

Face turned away.

The scrub pines edging

The hurricane fence deepen.

We take the path

Winding the drainage ditch,

(A desire path, says Updike—

Dirt beat down

By shortcut seekers),

Delivering us

Behind the theater,

Where sometimes

We hear booms

Or fragments of song

Come from within.


Annie Woodford lives Roanoke, Virginia, where she is a teacher at Virginia Western Community College. Her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Appalachian Heritage, The Comstock Review, Cold Mountain Review, The Chattahoochee Review, Town Creek Poetry, and Word Riot, among others.
In Poetry Tags Annie Woodford, Poetry, Errancy, 110 Beats, Wide Enough Spaces
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