Monday, August 20, 2012


Isobel

I.
To try to follow the Om and Sage -
My violin knows the language
And is teaching me.
She is nameless.

I’ve been feeding a grey stray cat
Because its bones protrude.
I’ve named it Gazpacho.

I do not yet know my violin’s name.
She may not know my name
But we trust each other.

II.
The naming of a violin is a difficult matter.
Today, she will be Isobel
Not a lover, but mother or daughter.
We’ve always had a platonic affair

It’s been suggested I try sleeping with her –
They don’t know
She has a rattle snake rattle inside.
Better that she watch from the wall
echoes and reverberates.

I hold her by my hand.
She holds a pleasant conversation.
But unexpected screeches at times –
She’s very sensitive.

I am true red fiddle woman of the high plains
Dancing in conversation
Capitulated.  

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Missouri Wind



(A poem in progress)

This city's pressing heavy  - blocking out the sky
The waters from my homeland run by here.
I’m like a bird flown from the nest
lost on the wind.

The waters from my birthplace rush through the states
Picking up and filtering chemicals.
The mountain springs and snow runs off
Runs through me - out through my eyes
Feathering here.
Will the sun to shine kinder on me tomorrow?
Will the rains come to wash it away?
Casting off the cloak of the sun.

I miss the smell of sage in the morning
And the stars like diamonds rolling
Running my fingers through the wind
The smell of the air
Their spirits are on the wind
And I’m down in this city
Surrounded by beveled glass and hard wood floors
 And all the material objects I adore

So this longing could be anywhere
The Missouri binds me here

Wednesday, June 13, 2012


Words of a Cotton Sock

YOU  COULD  SAY
I AM  NOT  FRILLY,
choice or fine, merely
FUNCTIONAL. SOME-
times  I  wish  I  were
than white cotton smelling of synthetic
sunshine and mildew and I do tire of being
trod on. But I will accept my place in the top
drawer. Folded into me, into myself, thankful
I am not yet          a dish rag or hand puppet.
      

Friday, March 30, 2012

Shower Song


The words strum through me
Bereft of thought
Each given to the antithesis

A harpsichord choir
Humming in limbo while the
Drops of water drip upon

My shaking continent
Awake with mourning
Singing on the trees        

Each thought singing and singeing
Dripping into the humble
Multitudes, plasma and

Green. Delicate spines.

We entrench ourselves in
A tone that is mute
A hum that is silent

A Yew tree. An epoch.
Memory’s epoch explodes!
Dripping

Why didn’t you wake me earlier?

Why did you leave me here to sleep alone?
Without stars?
The verdigris continues to ebb at

The memory of what was lost
What will be returned
Musty pages. And the drills of

The day pursue the meaning
Sweet company, come over.
Join angels. Solitude in our continents

Jupiter (Don’t think!)
Take the web and linger

Thursday, March 8, 2012

The Law of Conservation of Energy

In Egypt, the adze cuts open the mouth
For breath. To speak again
For the immortal Ka, a thousand lotus flowers
A tomb holding necessities for a world unknown
Isis did not start this, nor any of the gods
But her tears for Osiris flooded the Nile

In Tibet, the bardo spirit seeks a womb to enter back into this world
As ghosts pace the streets
Eulogies and epitaphs hold a silent mantra
Music and the law of vibration
Energy and the Law of Conservation
Words of power, elemental discussion

Here, the Black Book of the World was not tasked for me to write
I will write the Blue Book of the Waves
And I will drive a flying car to heaven
And I will get him out from under the ice
To cross realms and dimensions
And love the departed in present tense

~ Melody Montgomery

Friday, March 2, 2012

Doves and Sunflowers


I followed my father into the open field, not so interested in learning how to shoot but to spend time together. So many afternoons I had watched him teach my brother how to aim at the still can targets. I would stare at the tall trees surrounding the cinder lakes in northern Arizona somewhat watching but moreso daydreaming about other places while he showed my older brother how to aim. I was six - too small for the kick from the shot gun. I put my fingers in my ears and looked off into the distance.

But today, with a small pellet gun, he would teach me. In the field of wild sunflowers, he began to explain to me.

“This is the safety,” he said. “It is very important to leave it like this when you are not using it.” He demonstrated by sliding it into locked position.

“Yes,” I said, understanding.

“See this at the end of the barrel there? You want to line it up with this triangle.”

It made sense. He handed me the pellet gun. I held it gently and tried to line it up.

Birds feathered overhead. Doves. I thought of the afternoons at the picnic table in the yard of a family friend where we were tasked to prepare them. Gut them. Remove their soft feathers and the black pellets from the breasts. On the wooden, splintered table nothing remained of those white birds except a deep red hand-sized heart shape.

In the field, my father continued on, explaining physics to me, how to account for the birds in the air, the speed of the bullet and the speed of the birds. But we were surrounded by thousands of wild sunflowers. How could I look to the sky with all of those bright yellow flowers distracting me? I saw a thousand targets, so much simpler than the birds. They swayed slightly with the dry breeze but were relatively still.

My father continued talking. The physics of flight made as little sense to me as the fractions he explained while lying on the ground under his truck as he had me hand him a quarter this or a quarter that wrench. While he stood in front of me in the field, pointing at the sky and going on and on, I saw a perfect opportunity. Line the tip with the triangle. I held the gun to the brown center of the flower before me. I can do this! Placing pressure on the trigger, I squeezed it firm. My moment, my victory, was cut short. Suddenly my father was yelling. Did I hit him? Why was he yelling?

“What are you doing?!” he hollered. “You could have hit me, Melody! You do not shoot a gun when someone’s is in front of you!”

This did not make sense. My brilliant moment of hitting my bright target vanished. My father did not see the merit in how much simpler it was to aim at the flowers than the birds.