Moving Day

Sunrise greets us both: a reminder of the moving day
That lies ahead. Only there will be no moving from bed.
Jet lag brings with it a night of unending restless sleep.

Between the two Bella’s, Terrazza and Due, six steps
At most. Yet the ease with which we can make a mess
In six days will just astound. In the time it takes to carry

It over, breaking news keeps arriving from all over the world.
Time Share from NPR Books: John Ashbery, widely celebrated
And experimental Poet of the 21st Century, is dead at ninety.

After a late lunch, after we’re done, I take the time to read
A moving Obit on a blog from the London Review of Books.
It takes me many places, including to these moving lines:

The metre will be screamingly clear then,

the rhythms unbounced, for though we came

to life as to a school, we must leave it without graduating…

Five Poems

Mele

Let the Italian botanical lessons begin: Apples.

Oh yeah, and the Duomo (Cathedral) beside.

Easily Entertained

Nearly everyone we know, here and at home, is drawn at some point of wonder to ask, “So what do you do?” “Nothing much,” by way of an answer, sounds a bit uncivil if not all wrong. And yet, there is a partial truth in it.

Sure, there’s plenty to report: like the 7,342 steps between breakfast and lunch this morning. Yet that leaves out the places we did or didn’t stop (and the way the clouds come and go, breaking or returning the chill).

Let one small part stand for the whole: between Mercato and Libertà, the two major piazzas above us, we pass a temporary shop displaying the pencil work of a native Spoletini artist.

Exchanging a deliberative glance, we agree to check it out, though we have no idea what to expect. Shortly, a man appears from the back. Between our limited Italian and his gallant English, we talk.

Lorenzo Zangheri, we learn, is an engineer. He uses his drawing skills in his work, sketching all sorts of system designs. Yet in his other life, the art is informed by a fantastic sort of “conceptual engineering.”

One piece he did was the design for a wedding invitation. I wish I had spent more time studying the work. Then perhaps I could have translated it from my mind’s eye to yours. Rebecca, surely, will know how.

The summation of our day, I suppose, comes down to the point of “slowing down, stilling time.” I have no idea at all how long we stayed in Lorenzo’s shop. He was ever so patient, and we were no less attentive.

The Sanguine technique alone, using the pencils he showed us at length, was a wonder. Must be something about the shade of dried blood. Think Leonardo’s self-portrait. Or look at the poor excuse of a reproduction above.

The Big Boys

The Breakfast of Champions

Keeping Pace With the Big Race

Bicycles, mountains and long distances (to my mind) don’t align.
Catch the children soon enough, however, and they’ll ride along.

High on a Hill

Without instruments, I cannot say for sure how long the thunder rolls.
It comes so close and resounds so long the pull of nature feels strong.

There’s a hill…,” Tucker begins. “We called it a mountain until we hiked up to the top one day and saw the snow capped Sibillini stretching out across the horizon. No, it’s a hill–one of many colline that climb to the east of us and roll out to the north and south.

Power Down

Above the dishes and the glasses, a cupboard of books.

Just before the power went out, I browsed thru a quarter-shelf.
Living in a Foreign Language, the first familiar title my eye caught.

Fans of L.A. Law will remember Jill Eikenberry and Michael Tucker.
Fans of books about “living abroad” may want to read their book.

No choice with power down: cave man heads outside to the light.
Taking in the rain, breathing in the air, a page-turner I begin again.

Anything But a Canned Greeting

It’s been four months, and the passage of untold tourists, since the last time we ate at Civico 53.

Our story back then, tied to our Italian lessons, involved the instructions for cooking fresh lentils.

Tonight, out for a stroll, we expect at most a smile of recognition from a friendly but passing acquaintance.

The cordial greeting’s a cinch. But then he tells us to wait. Back from the kitchen, gift bag in hand, more lentil instructions flow.

What an amazing gift, a simple can of remembrance. Grazie.

What an amazing grace to return to this place, our small Umbrian town.