Thankful Thursday: In a pause
A friend emails me a poem each week, along with a one-page background on the poet, which she researches and writes. She's not a poet (she says) but she appreciates poetry.
She sends a mixed bag of poets I know and don't. This week a Latino poet. Last month a New Zealander. I'm always learning.
I know there are organizations that provide this same service, but I like thinking of this one person — whom I've met only once and briefly — each week thoughtfully choosing a poem and sharing its story with me and others. I like that one poem, lovingly shared by one person, can tie us all together in a poetic pause.
Thank you Vicki.
This Week's Poem (No. 382):
In Colorado My Father Scoured and Stacked Dishes
in a Tex-Mex restaurant. His co-workers,
unable to utter his name, renamed him Jalapeño.
If I ask for a goldfish, he spits a glob of phlegm
into a jar of water. The silver letters
on his black belt spell Sangrón. Once, borracho,
at dinner, he said: Jesus wasn’t a snowman.
Arriba Durango. Arriba Orizaba. Packed
into a car trunk, he was smuggled into the States.
Frijolero. Greaser. In Tucson he branded
cattle. He slept in a stable. The horse blankets
oddly fragrant: wood smoke, lilac. He’s an illegal.
I’m an Illegal-American. Once, in a grove
of saguaro, at dusk, I slept next to him. I woke
with his thumb in my mouth. ¿No qué no
tronabas, pistolita? He learned English
by listening to the radio. The first four words
he memorized: In God We Trust. The fifth:
Percolate. Again and again I borrow his clothes.
He calls me Scarecrow. In Oregon he picked apples.
Braeburn. Jonagold. Cameo. Nightly,
to entertain his cuates, around a campfire,
he strummed a guitarra, sang corridos. Arriba
Durango. Arriba Orizaba. Packed into
a car trunk, he was smuggled into the States.
Greaser. Beaner. Once, borracho, at breakfast,
he said: The heart can only be broken
once, like a window. ¡No mames! His favorite
belt buckle: an águila perched on a nopal.
If he laughs out loud, his hands tremble.
Bugs Bunny wants to deport him. César Chávez
wants to deport him. When I walk through
the desert, I wear his shirt. The gaze of the moon
stitches the buttons of his shirt to my skin.
The snake hisses. The snake is torn.
It's Thankful Thursday, a weekly pause to appreciate people, places, things (and poems). Joy contracts and expands in proportion to our gratitude. What makes your world expand?


Reader Comments (9)
Ooof. I'm having one of *those* days. What better time to remind myself about the great things in life?
1. Friends, both old and new
2. Discovering a band I'd never heard before, and having their music rock my world (this week: The Avett Brothers, and their album I and Love and You)
3. Travel plans coalescing
4. Finishing a piece of writing and knowing I have not only done great work, but pushed my creative boundaries in the process
5. Getting to see one of my favorite stand-up comedians (Jackie Kashain) live, and then after the show being able to tell her how much I enjoy her work.
Corral will be part of the Folger reading series this fall/spring. I'll be posting about it on Monday.
Wonderful poem!
Maureen - That'll be a great reading. I'll look to your blog post for details.
Allyson - Thank you for thanking. : )
Wow, powerful poem!
Yes, isn't it a great piece?! Until Vicki sent this poem, I'd not read any of Corral's work -- and now I am eager to read more.
He's great---I love this poem (I recently read it somewhere--was it in Poetry?).
What a nice tradition with you and your friend.
Hi Hannah -
Yes, according to Vicki's thorough notes, this poem was in the April edition of Poetry. You have a good eye/ear/memory.
--- Awesomeness. We all need a Vicki in our lives.
Well said, Trish. ( I just now -- months late -- discovered your comment). thxs!