Center for Women's Intercultural Leadership / Promoting Transformative Intercultural Engagement
Location: SMC -> CWIL -> Poetas y Pintores

Poetas y Pintores: Artists Conversing with Verse

   

The Artist                                              The Poet

Sam Coronado                                     Aleida Rodriguez

"Dreaming of Cuba" (detail)
2005

Digital Painting, 20" x 16"

          

 

The Poet

Aleida Rodriguez

 

The Garden 

                            What have you done with the garden

                       entrusted to you?

                                                   —Antonio Machado

1.

When I call home to check my mail,

she tells me the latest word from the world is

No, jagged as a torn envelope.  But

she’s been sawing up wooden panels

on which she’ll paint icons of our English setter,

our yellow-nape parrot, our two cats,

each with the neighboring hill as a backdrop,

like medieval landscape. She admits

she suddenly missed me today in the market,

picking out unblemished red potatoes

and pristine ears of corn, missing the way

I check bags, return the gouged and wormy ones

to the bin. “Oh, you only miss me

in supermarkets,” I say. She insists

we’ve turned a corner. When I leave town now,

she confesses, she lives like a teenage boy

for just a couple of days. She loves our simple life:

the way we cook together, talk in bed

late into the night. Apples are falling

from our tree faster than she can eat

or give them away, so she’s blanching

and freezing them for later.

Tomatoes are sacrificing themselves

on the altar of her mayonnaise-laden sandwiches.

Acorn squash fill like bellies,

but sow bugs have become squatters on the peppers.

 

2.

Late that night, still snared in the sticky net

of sleep, I surface to remember my dreams:

     All night I search the plum-dark city

     for a coffee shop that will let me

     set up my portable Smith-Corona.

     “It’s the size and color

     of a thick slice of bread,” I offer

     in my defense. All night

     my sleep is trampled

     by tiny black tanks.

I turn on a lamp. Through my reflection

the red geranium blooms out of a hole

in the patio, the asparagus fern launches

another monstrous shoot, the green note

of morning plays the leaves of the ginger,

now that I’ve trimmed back the holly

that was darkening the yard.

Back along the perimeter fence the bougainvillea dangles

bursts of coral at the tips of spider legs, finally,

after eight barren years. Last year

you could not have convinced me

I would fall in love again.

My garden lay abandoned in yellow weeds.

Is this what love is? Bending the will

all winter and spring, pulling at the ground?

Clearing once more the path between fruit trees?

Watering the desert? What faith

moved me to haul out the remains

of the old bench, buy another, sturdier one

to place at the secluded spot

behind the garage wall

where I set up the typewriter

to record the progress and settle in

to see what happens next?

 

  

 

CWIL · 9 Havican Hall · Saint Mary's College · Notre Dame, IN · 46556-5001 · Phone: (574) 284-4051 · Fax: (574) 284-4141 · E-mail: cwil@saintmarys.edu
© 2004 Center For Women's InterCultural Leadership, All Rights Reserved. SMC Home | CWIL Home | Site Search | Site Map | Contact Us