Too Many Purses

Curses, curses
Too many purses.
Can’t find my keys now
for better or worses.

Posted in Original Poems | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Good Bye Mighty Okra Friends

Another tough farewell, I pulled the okra stalks, once lush, tall, proud bearers of pounds of okra, now frost bitten, dried shells of their former glory.  I hated to say good bye, but I couldn’t bear to see them like that.  The surprisingly huge stalks, some over an inch wide, are lying in my front yard.  That final letting go: so hard!

On July 26: Late but vigorous

I didn’t procrastinate too much this year garden-wise except with okra.  I started the seeds late, choosing to plant them in cells under lights even in mid-April when the last frost day was near.  I like the control you have under lights: water, temperature, light I can bend to my will, unlike outside where I have little control over the sun, the wind, the rain.  Though last year’s seeds, they germinated like gangbusters, almost 100% peeking out from the soil saying, “Here we are, ready or not.”  And it seems I wasn’t quite ready.  They grew well under lights and continued to grow well transplanted into pots and set outside.  And when I finally set them in the ground in and around the Lorelei, they shot up like Jack’s beanstalk, maybe not to the clouds but fast and green and lush.

August 20: Gorgeous, lush, but scant fruit

Continue reading

Posted in Garden: A Love Story | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Duck 21

Charles Duckens

Duck Series Gallery

Posted in Duck Series | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Bombay Letters – Monsoon!

May 1998

Dear India Watchers,

My wife and I played in a raging sewer today and enjoyed ourselves entirely.  We did that by simply taking a walk during a tremendous downpour.   We see heavy rains everyday, now that we’re in the monsoon season.  My understanding of the word monsoon, before now, was that it is a severe tropical rainstorm, sort of like a hurricane.  The word, as used (and experienced) by us here, is much more synonymous with the words winter or spring.  It’s a season.

The first big rains hit yesterday, though it has been raining off and on for a week or so now.  We had gone to the Oberoi, one of the nice 5 star hotels in town, to get our hair cut.  My wife went to the beauty shop on the ladies’ side, and I visited the barber.  When we were finished it was really raining hard.  Our driver drove us home in the ferocious storm.  As we went up the hill to where we live, the rain came down even harder, causing the water rushing down the street toward us to get heavier by the minute.  We reached the ridge and drove on the down-hill road, at best a narrow two-lane alley, that takes us to the street where we live.  Driving down that way with the car lashed by wind-blown torrential rains, we were increasingly alarmed by the magnitude of the storm.  Waterfalls poured out of gutters and openings in the walls along the road, and raging creeks streamed from the mouths of the side streets we passed.  Is this sounding like Noah yet: “The windows of the firmament opened and the fountains of the deep sprang forth…”?  Continue reading

Posted in Bombay Letters | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

A Book and Its Cover

I wanted to show off the cover that an artist designed for Marigold Man, the book I’m writing.  I wrote about the possibility of this happening here: They liked it, they really liked it….  Each day since the 50,000 word novel writing event began on November 1, I’ve checked the Office of Letters and Light blog where they’ve been posting a different cover and synopsis each day.  Here is their blog post with the cover and here, is the cover itself:

Can you tell my book by its cover?

I am humbled and grateful that someone thought my synopsis, copied below, was worth being one of the 30 out of thousands.  I’m also intrigued by what the artist picked up from the summary and title and realize it’s really pretty close to what I’m writing.  I haven’t gotten to the angst part yet, but it’s coming.

(By the way, as of bedtime November 8, I was at 17,855 words.) Continue reading

Posted in NaNoWriMo | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

When the Frost is on the Punkin

James Whitcomb Riley

WHEN the frost is on the punkin and the fodder’s in the shock,
And you hear the kyouck and gobble of the struttin’ turkey-cock,
And the clackin’ of the guineys, and the cluckin’ of the hens,
And the rooster’s hallylooyer as he tiptoes on the fence;
O, it’s then the time a feller is a-feelin’ at his best,
With the risin’ sun to greet him from a night of peaceful rest,
As he leaves the house, bareheaded, and goes out to feed the stock,
When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder’s in the shock.

They’s something kindo’ harty-like about the atmusfere
When the heat of summer’s over and the coolin’ fall is here—
Of course we miss the flowers, and the blossoms on the trees,
And the mumble of the hummin’-birds and buzzin’ of the bees;
But the air’s so appetizin’; and the landscape through the haze
Of a crisp and sunny morning of the airly autumn days
Is a pictur’ that no painter has the colorin’ to mock—
When the frost is on the punkin and the fodder’s in the shock. Continue reading

Posted in Autumn, Poems Memorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Sun’s Spotlight on Fall’s Palette

The just-over-the-horizon sun this morning lit a landscape of late fall trees in and around a brilliant green golf course and a cluster of white houses with rust red roofs amid more brightly-leaved trees.  The whole scene was laid out on the other side of the wide mouth of Hunting Creek, that charming bit of wetland that somehow survived or renewed itself after so much development sprang up on all sides: highways, apartments, houses and stores, yards, parks and more.  Each color of autumn, brown, nut, deep velvet, scarlet red, oranges, golds, yellows and tans, was splashed on the living canvas before me.  And the just-risen sun shone squarely on that natural stage, a spotlight showcasing the show just getting underway.  I was glad I had walked that direction to the bus stop and deep down, I considered getting to work late or maybe not even going at all, just to watch this marvel unfold, an event not likely to be repeated quite like this ever again.

Catching the sun's gold...

Continue reading

Posted in Autumn | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Collecting Pub Names, part 2

An odd bit of word play I engage in from time to time is collecting words.  Here is the second portion of my collection of pub names which I gathered during a one-month trip through England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales in 1999.  You can read the first portion and an introductory letter in Collecting Pub Names, Part 1.  Reading over these lists again, I want to study the origins of pub names.  For example, why is the word “arms” used so much?  One of my favorites from this portion of the list is The Coventry’s Arm’s Free House.  I like the two possessives in a row.  As a garden-guy, I also like The Slug and Lettuce.

A person could collect all kinds of words, from book titles, to puns, to misused adverbs one hears on television, to words with four syllables or more, to names that begin with Q, to, well, anything, really.  Consider treating yourself to a new notebook and beginning your own word collection.

The Frothblowers Arms, The Cloisters, The White Heart, Queen’s Arms, The Tollgate, The Wilton, Horse and Grooms, Hogshead, Tom Brown’s, The White Horse, The Wheatsheaf, Bell Inn, The Swan Inn, The Pelican Inn, The Oak, The Ludlow Arms, The Longs Arms, The Somerset Arms, The New Inn, Crystal Palace, The Ale House, The Huntsman, The Oliver Free House, Swan Inn, The March Hare Inn,  The Coventry’s Arm’ s Free House, The French House Inn, The Flyford Arms, The Red Hart Inn, The Bull’s Head, The Stage, Thatch Tavern, Quill and Parchment, Continue reading

Posted in Word Collections, Word Play | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Writers In The Mist

Literary Lee feels privileged and lucky.  So should all the many The Life Literary readers.  Here’s why:  The noted scribologist (one who studies the habits of writers) Argyle Schield has agreed to share his field notes, scribbled hastily in his scribology journal during his recent (and ongoing) observations of writers in their element.  This blog’s greedy corporate sponsors have obtained the sole rights to publish his observations, wittily called Writers in the Mist (WITM).  November, National Novel Writing Month, brings out these usually shy and retiring creatures (writers, not greedy corporate sponsors) in scads and droves and, (for literary lions) prides, providing rare opportunities for professional scribologists like Dr. Schield to note and catalog their behavior.  Being the soul of concision, Argyle will be using Twitter to tweet his observations throughout November.  You can read them in the column on the right-hand side of The Life Literary’s homepage under the surprisingly imaginative title:  The Life Literary on Twitter (or click here).

Posted in NaNoWriMo, Writing | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The First Paragraphs of Marigold Man

(I’m not going to do this often during November, but here are the first few paragraphs, the first 990 words of Marigold Man.  I confess I edited them, something I won’t have time to do, can’t take the time to do much this month.  It’s just that after starting the novel this morning, and thinking through some things, I realized I wanted to change course a little.  I told myself this first bit sets a tone, at least for me and how I write it.  So I re-did it some (thought not as much as you’d think), and here it is.  Don’t tell me what you think.  I may share a snippet later, but only once or twice.)

I never dreamed that gathering seeds four Octobers ago would lead me to this jail cell.  They were just marigold seeds.  Just a bunch of darned marigold seeds.  I was so fascinated, so thrilled, so, so,  in love.  I was smitten by what I was seeing, by what I was holding in my hand, the life, the beauty, the potential, the sloppy joy that is a garden, that is a plant, that is a seed.  I guess I looked at those slender black and white bits of, well, almost straw, what soon became a bag full of the things, and I got a glimmer of a plan, the vaguest hint of how those seeds would be my ticket to freedom, my ticket out of the boxes, the cells, the cubicles that defined my life at that moment.  So ironic, those little horticultural tickets to freedom led me to this small, brightly lit six by six room on the wrong side of about eight well-guarded locked doors.

I’ll never forget that first fateful day when it all dawned on me, like a wave on a shore, like a thunderstorm out of the blue, unexpected, unsought, but powerful, strong, winds whipped up to change things in their path.  Cappy had just called to me from the house, “Hey sweet gardener mine, think you’ll be able to drag that sorry green thumb of yours up here to supper in about fifteen minutes.”  “O.K., Cap, sweet wife of my youth.  I’m just finishing up out here.  I’ll be there shortly.”  I looked up at her and smiled and shook my head.  How did I luck into this one- in -a- million woman?  How did I fool her into marrying me?  I love her, my beautiful Capricia, that not too tall in reality, but in my mind and in the experience of everyone who meets her, that woman who walks tall, smiles wide and sees right through you to the core.  She looked especially tasty in this early evening Autumn sun, her still- curvy figure distracting me for a moment from my work.  She smiled and blew me a kiss.  “I know what your ‘just fifteen minutes’ can be.  You’re not kidding anyone here.  Don’t get absorbed.”  “Don’t worry.  I’m almost done for the evening.”  I was cleaning up the garden, getting it ready for fall.  The day was perfect: blue skies with distant high wisps of clouds, a light almost warm breeze, the kind of weather that makes you think winter is a myth and summer will never go.  But I knew better, and so was taking this perfect moment to clean up the garden.  After a long season of growing things, sometimes, if everything works right, an almost riotous green, I am grateful for the break, glad for things to slow down.  I enjoy pulling up the now dried plants, thinking back to the almost impossibly good eating they gave us.  All those red, juicy tomatoes, that corn that grew so well this year, we pretty near ate it for almost a month.  And so many cucumbers in so many salads, so many pickles, so many sweet green tubes of joy we gave away to neighbors.  I’m a popular fellow in the height of the growing season. Continue reading

Posted in NaNoWriMo | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment