Giant Alice-in-Wonderland
rabbit-ear-leaves
Cuban tobacco plants
low and full
stand one behind the other
orderly and lush
praying hands repeating
ad infinitum into the horizon
neat lines in soft mounds
of dirt, my feet sink into clay
Alongside plants
under a drooping canopy
spider webs wrap over inside
a 1953 Rambler sunk
in silty soil
like Dalí’s rainstorm in a taxi
a desert inside a Rambler
petrified like the people of Pompeii
in the relentless Cuban sun.
by Maria Lisella
Maria Lisella is Program Coordinator for the IAWA readings at the Cornelia St. Café, and is co-editing an anthology based on those readings. She lives in Long Island City and was a finalist in the competition for Poet Laureate of Queens in 2007. A longtime travel writer, she currently edits a national travel trade magazine and is a member of the New York Travel Writers Association.
[Photo Credit: Stillman Rogers]
Maria is a star--smart, multi-talented and so creative.
ReplyDeleteThis poem made me gasp--loved it!
ReplyDeleteIncredible visual images. I'm there!!
ReplyDeleteEve Carr
What intelligent imagery! This packs a lot of meaning into very few words. Wonderful.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous. The ability to see afresh is priceless.
ReplyDeletehello i am new here and i like the article.
ReplyDelete