Saturday, January 22, 2022

Colors of Dust

 Colors of Dust-
        
                    Wildflowers
                                       in a Desert Land
                       

                    Poems by Anne Selden Annab

 

(Poems written during and after many visits to my husband Jaffar's family in Jordan, dedicated to his beloved father, our Baba )

To Wendy



        I am the texture
        on paper;
        the ink inked onto me
        clings
        here and there

        so much empty space.

        But all others see
        are symbols:
        Mere thimbles
        that think themselves
        something
        so much more.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Wander Gently

 
            Wander Gently

        Wander gently
        through a Spring meadow
        in a desert land.
        
        Cherish a brief blossoming
        from the brilliant red poppy
        to each tiny, delicate, sunlit star and
        Purple thistles, blue flax, pinkish roses, all
        come bursting from rock
        and earth
        and everywhere
        where a seed might stray
        there is bloom.




Absorbed

 

        People become places;
        moods and seasons sprinkle
        like salt, absorbed
        into stone.

        But structures shape
        the thoughts;
        An arch's key
        is the wedge between
        now and then
        I remember
        now and then
        walk down an alley
        and echo.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

The Sea of Lot


        We started out from Amman.
        
        The road is a scant thread
        that follows the form
        of the mountains closely,
        swerving and veering
        on the edge of gravity
        as we skirt potholes,
        continuously fringed by chasms
        of every size and sort.
        Zoom past lorries
        and trucks brightly painted.
        Drive and drive
        in a lunar landscape as
        the terrain straightens and sinks.
        
        Check points slow us down,
        but mostly the young, serious soldiers,
        dressed in olive and armed,
        just wave us through.
    
        We arrived at the Dead Sea
        unexpectedly-
        Not at the Spa, where
        people go to float
        and read a paper
        as if lounging comfortably...
        No, not the Spa, but on past all people,
        just happenstance-
        bump off the road
        and bump down so close
        to what seems to be a cliff drop;
        but it wasn't an edge
        just a little stubble of a hill                             
        for feet to race down the shifting
        stone sand and arms to reach out
        into the warm breeze
        
        and skip stones in the buoyant Salt Sea.

        Take a stick and stir,
        the minerals come up like oil
        clinging to the surface
        following the path of the stick
        and elaborating on it's every motion.

        We had such a pleasant interlude
        Enshallah


        Let the children play.

        Back to the car;
        bump back to the road
        rumble jerk
        over what would be a meadow
        if it were green:
        It feels like driving
        over a plowed field,
        deeply furrowed
        and thrashing us about
        until we reach
        the smooth macadam
        of the new road
        along the Dead Sea


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Wadi Mujib

   
        The road, like a Roman road,
        leading straight and level,
        brings us up over a sharply angled bridge
        that spans the deep gorge
        of the Grand Canyon, Wadi Mujib.
        
        A sleek modern bridge
        that cuts across the crumbling chasm.
        
        At first I see a suspension bridge,
        but the expected tangled web
        of metal has been supplanted. 


        Instead, neatly etched into space,
        is the profile of two great triangles
        delineated by wide solid bases that soar up
        towards extreme narrowness-
        Geometric precision swiftly shaving girth,
        and the pinnacles seems to dissolve
        into the light air of deep sky.

        The chasm is the Grand Canyon
        of  Jordan, Wadi Mujib.
        Deep red rock with stratum shades
        that flux and fuse into shadow-
        a fissure that holds a shallow river
        as it empties into the Dead Sea.
        
        We pull over-
        rush up to take pictures.
        Pictures of the chasm,
        that's been there to be gazed at
        since history itself.
        Pictures of each other,
                                        
        knowing we're a brief interlude
        on this astonishing landscape.
        Pictures of the exquisite bridge.
        Pictures of rock formations looming
        against blue sky.  Pictures of the water
        way down below, the trickle
        that tickled these tall cliffs into place.
        Pictures of each other posing
        and pictures of each other
        taking pictures.

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Water


        
        High up     
        on the rocky, parched roadside
        we see the smooth dark shape
        of water, way, way below.


        There's no road really
        just dry rocky earth to follow down;
        like water that finds the easiest path
        we dribble down towards the stream, the river.


        The river that blasted through the rock,
        carved a channel deep, drop by drop
        flickered a shaft through stone
        and amplified it into an immense ravine.
        
        There's a bus being washed
        under the bridge,
        They use gravel too,
        enthusiastically scrubbing and splashing.

        We clamor about a bit.
        My husband touched by hawks
        as they hover on cliff currents high above.
        Nell enthralled by all the color and shape
        of sheer rock.
        The boys entranced by bugs,
        especially the beetle with long long legs
        to hold him up off the ground,
        the parching ground.

        Dust on my finger tips,
        my face,
        wind...
        
        Go down to wash in the river.
        ebb and flow with the sound
        of water wearing down rock
        and splashing on my feet.
         

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

To Our Right

             
        To our right, the Salt Sea        
        shimmers smooth with spectrums of pink
        and lavender and blue light.
        Jerusalem is over there,
        beyond.
        In the gaseous glimmerings
        that rise above the fluent surface
        of the still sea.
        I think of the Dome of the Rock:
        
        An image I've seen from many angles,
        except with my own eyes.
        
        Less than 40 miles away, yet a world away
        a place we can't go to yet.
        
        Someday...
        in the gaseous glimmerings
        that rise
        to our right.
    

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Jerusalem

                                                    
        Jerusalem- (No turnoff from our lane
        as we drive on a desert road).

        All armies have invaded-
        no creed
        no holy word    
        has been left unscathed
        in this exalted city
        of a thousand centuries.
        
        Perhaps if I had walked
        the Via Dolorosa,
        or if I had touched
        the Wailing Wall,
        or entered
        the Dome Of The Rock,
        perhaps I too
        would be imbued
        to thrash God's will
        about on others,
        to extol my ancestor's way-
        their course and curse.
        
        Perhaps if my husband
        were less a man
        less a lover
        less a friend
        less a father to our sons
        I'd turn to you and yell
        screaming all my own insanities
        arguing with all my angst
        about infidels                                
        barbarians
        filth...
        I'd soil your city
        with the expectations
        of jealous rage
        and zealotry
        and claim you
        as a narrow place;
        no room for anything but
        my own ideology.
        
        Perhaps if my childhood
        had been worse,
        I'd come quivering to you
        expecting God.
        
        But all I have
        are books to lead me
        through your streets,
        temples, chapels,
        even into a mosque...
                
        It's the wildflowers
        on the hills east
        of the river Jordan
        that claim my spirit's calm,
        swilling me with inspiration
        
        the open air
        and the bluest sky.
        
        The kindness of in-laws...

        Jerusalem
        perhaps some day
        I'll come to you,                            
        when the Holy Trinity shifts and settles
        and is equally of  Moslem, Christian, Jew-
        And from that pinnacle,
        pierced by all our empathy,
        I'll be able to walk your streets...
                
        Perhaps someday
        Jerusalem,
        God's claim
        will barricade
        people's hearts
        from hate and bigotry:
        To make a place
         to abide in peace... Yerushalayim.

    

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Picnic

       
        The Land Rover leaps up off the road
        lurch lunging up a cliff with all the bounce and bound
        of crashing down a cliff...

        Squeeze through an eroding pass
        with scarcely a thread breadth on both sides,         
        scarcely a thread breadth between us and a
        steep tumble down bounce and crash
        precipice.

        Crunch up a landscape
        that leaves no trace of our passage,
        just tumbled rocks and dust
        that dance.
    
        Choose a spot-
        sameness spans all sight,
        its only distinction is
        that the Land Rover
        has stopped.

        Spill out to feast on pita bread
        and goat cheese sandwiches-
        Food that doesn't mind being squished.

        Step delicately among goat turd
        and minuscule wildflower;
        it's quite easy to twist an ankle
        on windswept rock.
        
        Eyes flit over the treacherous track
        it will take to return;
        a swig of cool water from a jar
        empowers
        and off we go.

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Moab's Hills


        All the hills
        in a prophet's eye...

        In our Land Rover,
        we leave the low, flat landscape
        that holds the shimmering Salt Sea.
        
        The smooth straight road
        reaches up into the mountains,
        where it wraps itself tightly
        into curves following contours.
        Knolls rush up at us only to fall
        sharply away, arising as other hills
        farther on, farther up emerge,
        both steeper and softer.

        Eyes scan across yet another
        canyon as we careen,
        always on edge; and suddenly-
        huge faces in the rock emerge,
        like Mount Rushmore,
        but no man-made chisel carved
        the stunning contour of features
        set to emanate from the avalanche of time-
        the avalanche of fluent rock erosion,
        staring back at me.
        
        Craggy, weather worn, furrowed faces
        watching with eyes that are nimble shadows-
        shelves and slants and surface
        gnawed by time and tale.
        The road leaps sharply up and
                                        

        I look down deep rocky
        chasms, that approach
        with lurch and loom
        and sloping plateaus
        sprigged with stony pasture:
 
        Each relatively level patch
        bears one lone shepherd-
        Bedouin robes draping him
        with historical allusions.
        
        Black rocks become a tumble of goats.
        White stone stubble...browsing sheep.
        Height-depth-dark-light-
        nothing seems anything
        except ancient.

        Even recent excavations
        (crude surface mining)
        has the appearance
        of an archaeologist's mound
        divulging treasure;
        gnawed by time and tale.

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Colors Of Dust


        Colors of Dust,
        of gloom and glow-
        Colors of dirt and rock
             and centuries
        of stumbling
        looking skyward.
        
        How the stars must
                have figured,
        sharply delineating direction
        amid these softly mounded
        mountains that
        crumble
        with pebbles
        and goat turd.
        
        The Bedouin tents are pitched
        Huge woolly rooms
        swaged to keep out
                sun
            wind
        eyes
        
        watching us
        zoom past.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Extending

 
  
        A girl on a hill;
        the wind sweeps up
        and her dark skirt swirls
        lifts slightly, modestly,
        to show her strong naked legs
        planted firmly-
        the color of flesh
        extending.

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Kerak


        A Crusader's Castle.
        A great bastion of European design...
        
        We've come from the Dead Sea    
        where we skipped small flat stones
        that skimmed happily over towards Jerusalem.

        We've come through Moab's Hills;
        hills that seemed so gently round from far away
        until the road leapt up, leaving your heart
        skipping, skimming over towards Jerusalem,
        as the car ricocheted off in the opposite direction.

        Wildflowers are everywhere &
        sheep & goats & shepherds
        earth untouched by modern stuff,
        just landscape dramatically rising every which way.
 
        The Crusader's Castle dominates,
        claims the entire top of distant
        mountain we're heading towards,    
        as if it is the greatest thing in all this wonderful world,
        the most magnificent construction
        in all this incredible land
        and it seems omnipotent, irrepressible-
        until we come up to the summit and reach
        the crowded little town of Karaoke.
        
        Throngs of Arab Citizens
        are making their way about the bustle
        of everyday lives: Shopping. Chatting. Shuffling.
        Stopping to stare at the obvious strangers
        in the Land Rover bumbling slowly
        through the tight maze of streets.
        
        Low buildings block our view of the great castle.
        My fair-haired sons are like luggage tossed about
        in the back of the car, looking out as others look in.
        
        Curious.

        We've invaded the afternoon,
        come charging in with our strange ways
        and a shinny car and weird clothes
        and odd hair and pale flesh:
        Invaded this busy town's rhythms and patterns.
        Irrevocably disrupted both duty and leisure,
        in our reckless search for the Crusaders Castle.

        We struggle up and down
        narrow jammed streets
        that might (or might not) be
        the way leading to the our castle.
        
        A kindly stranger on the very crowded street
        who is armed with a word or two of our own
        odd language, takes pity on our obvious plight,
        steps gallantly forward, and politely directs us
        to our destination.

        Having eluded the town itself,
        we come to the castle…

        We step out of the warm swaddling of our familiar car,
        leaving its hot shelter to feel cool strong sunlight
        caught on light breezes that wash us with airs  
        and we enter the castle through its gate.
        We pass through thick walls of stone.
                                        

        Large blocks of stone laid neatly,
        tightly together to form the fortification
        that's now only good for
        intriguing and holding captive
        the occasional invasions of tourists,
        or sheltering a flock of nibbling goats.
        We scramble over and under
        and through the ruins
        that every which way overlook
        and command an impressive view.

        It's a large place
        with expanses of space underfoot
        that stretch like stadiums all around.
        Inside and out.
        Over there is a mound,
        closer it becomes a dark stair
        curling out of a rock that becomes a wall,
        and leads down to a cavernous hall
        lit by high narrow slit windows.

        Sound echoes in eerie ways:
        Footstep might be horse stomp.
        Dust shimmers in precise wedges
        of nebulous light
        let in by the slit windows.

        We walk in a duskiness of old stone
        surrounded by space paved
        below, beside, and high above- all long ago,
        walled and roofed, what did it hold?
        Who were they- as foolish as my own sensitive self
        imagining the glimmer of armor moving,
        the clink of a cup laid aside
        Imagining that only I have the wisdom
                                        
        to penetrate this experience
        and explain.
 
        For all the beauty of the day
        the perfect weather,
        pleasant companionship
        and intriguing history
        I find myself shuddering
        cringing
        not enjoying it as I should-
        
        These rocks emanate
        hostility.
        There seems a cruel touch
        within in the sheltering walls
        a corruption
        trying to taint me
        until
        we come to a chapel.

        Built with in the castle,
        almost central
        on its lofty plateau
        The far portion of its high roof,
        once arced with stone wedged tightly,
        has fallen to expose blue heaven above.
        
        Wild flowers sprig out of the rock
        up on the edge that's left
        in the tall stone wall.
        
        The altar is a small meadow
        where Queen Anne's Lace bloom
        and sparrows flit
        and sing.
                                        
        A chapel reclaimed,
        from a tortuous past.
        Karaoke reclaimed
        by light and air
        and wildflowers.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Wild Flowers


        Deep yellow mustard,
        bright red poppies, white daises,
        and much much more


        to entertain the fancy
        as they grow in quaint bouquets
        as if on purpose-


        Fragile fragrant little splays
        often underfoot
        as a short walk becomes constant pauses.


        Here as small gold burst of petal
        star shape
        as if dropped and planted from heaven.


        There- another echoes the gold star
        but it's contained in a soft mid blue flower.


        There a thistle blends
        with a cluster of possible roses.


        I think this is a pansy, that might be
        a lily.

        This delicate beauty of blossoming
        is a veritable encyclopedia
        of all the wild flowers I can't name...

        I can only enjoy
        as the sun flushes my white cheeks pink


        and the elevated air touches deep blue sky
        as zither breezes sweep down
        from centuries of sighs-


        Exquisite wild flowers.

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Blond Bedouin


        Blond Bedouin child-
        is it the dust of ancient rock
        or a distant ancestor
        from the crumbling
        crusader castle...
        What has given you,
        sweet child wide eyed
        watching us
        zoom past,
        what has given you
        that halo?
        Wheat- gold
        like bread
        that's not been baked,
        still on the shaft
        growing
        like you...
        Will you be blond woman
        head covered to hide
        from strong sun,
        and strangers' eyes
        will never know
        of the angel's halo
        still round your head
        that's grown into a river
        of wheat falling
        down a brown back.
        Sweet child wide eyed
        sturdy like the soil,
        you stand
        like rock itself-
        your skin
        brown and dust,
        but all I see
        is halo
        wheat gold
        shimmer song.


 poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Taybeh- Wadi Moussa, Jordan


          
        We arrive     
        at sunset.
        Stretch out
        stiff limbs
        and open
        eyes to see
        the sandstone
        sculptures
        carved from
        cloud shape
        shifting
        above Petra.

 

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab




Publsihed- Harrisburg Review 1998

Tahbeh Hotel's courtesy literature found in our rooms (several decades ago)... Uneven floor please watch your step

      The Souk at Taybet Zaman

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nabatean pottery and ceramics
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petra sand bottles
weavings- rugs & wall hangings
hand carved olive wood
bras & copper
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Have your photagraph taken in authentic Bedouin attire at Al-Mukhtar
        open daily 7:30- 11:00

            
            Map

 [ a sketch of a jumble of odd little shapes tightly wedged together with free spaces as oddly shaped as each room, and little lines depicting steps occur at irregular and unexpected places- it is an old village that has been artfully rebuilt into a beautiful hotel.]

        Almashi- cafe
        Bustan- village square
        Diwan- lounge bar
        Dukan- gift shop
        Elbeer- bar
        Finjan- oriental snack
        Hammam- turkish bath
        Sahtain- main dining room
        Saraya- banquet hall
        Souk- handicraft center
        Tabolin- oriental bakery

    Uneven floor please watch your step.


* Note: This page is an exact copy of the Tahbeh Hotel's courtesy literature found in our rooms. It was written in a relaxed hand on thick brown paper.  I have copied it verbatim.

Saraya



        I wrap myself
        in the strange words
        
        delicious sounds
        mostly mispronounced
        
        and reverberating
        with adventure        
        

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

The Royal Suite


        The floor is uneven
            dingy slabs of smooth stone.
        The same soft drab color of the hills.
        The walls are irregular
            bumpy rocks mortared
             into odd places
        falling into pillars...
        Two straight columns
        step across the center
        of this immense low ceiling room,
        joined by arches that I suppose support the ceiling,
        but more importantly they give this wide open room
        a feeling of snug space.
        
        Along the walls are deep benches covered
        with soft pillow mattresses.
        Each bed being a long bench
        with a round bolster on each end,
        perfect as an elbow rest as you lean over to chat,
        or a pillow so you can sprawl out, half sleeping,
        but erect enough to watch
        as the children race from pillar to pillar,
        chasing themselves and each other and shadows
        of all the children who have played in this space,
        freed from chores or the strain of being a tourist,
        or whatever else compels them
        to act more than their age.

        We explore every numerous nook.

        Open up the carved wooden cupboard
        to find a large mirror,            
        gaze at the room echoed behind,
                                        
        then glance to see a shimmering self,                                                  

        shinning with curiosity.
        Gently close the mirror back
        behind it's heavy ornate doors.
        Who wants to look at a reflection
        when so much real is to be touched:
        The silk pillows are stripped with rich reds
        and golds in random bands, tasseled-
        everything a princess could wish for comfort,
        including all my loved ones close.

        I go to the furthest room,
        the smallest room,
        and sit down at a narrow desk
        that's built into the wardrobe.
        I suppose some in my place
        would be attending to their face,
        brushing blush on a cheek,
        color on lips...
        but I scribble words.

        Let my face be whatever
        it wants to become
        as my mind surges with
        impressions, textures, scents,
        music all to my mind
        as my mind flits through
        all I've experienced
        in a very full day.
        
        Images, one after another
        careening up a road
        that curves sharply
        unexpectedly always up,
        or down.

        Dust on my fingertips,
        my face.
        
        Wind.
        
        Everything spills
        into itself
        and each other
        what order was it in?

        What does it matter...

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Taybet Zaman

 
        We flit out,
        the three children and I
        (while the others nap)
        to explore the village
        with narrow passages
        that widen for no reason
        then shrink back...
        Steps are helter skelter
        here and there
        as the hotel is of a hillside
        of the land as it was found
        centuries ago…
        A place for huts to become homes
        and courtyards to spurt suddenly
        from behind a high wall.
        A community.
        Built with oddly shaped rocks
        mortared into solid, although
        unexpected, walls and arches and walkways.
        Now the residents have moved
        to concrete block residences
        up the road a bit.
        Places with chickens
        and goats and a donkey,
        wash on the line
        that sort of stuff.
        
        And these huts turned to homes turned
        to a quaint hotel.
       

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

The Craft's Souk



        There's a glass blower.
        The solid daub ledge
        holds a cotillion
        of green and blue glass-
        breakable shapes spun
        as he blows and pulls and dips
        and spills and whips  and drops

                                                     and pulls                                                       

a
                              cobra
            
        from liquid glass dripping and twirled.
        
        The hot furnace
        is a nest of orange red
        in the dusky room.
        Night is outside
        and we stand near enough
        to be warmed by the stove.
        Desert nights can be colder
        than you think.

        I hold the youngest child,
        and feel him twitch and twist
        as the glass blower    moves
        with arms stretched up and out suspending
                                red glass
        
        that drops into a iridescent swan.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

 

Published Harrisburg Review 1998

Sand Bottles

  

                             There are
                                more
                               colors
                               of sand
                               in little
                               dishes
                                than I
                               thought
                          possible. From
                         the white I know
                       so well through the
                       pinks  and  oranges
                      and reds I'm learning,
                    to the browns I believed
                 in before I came, to black.
              He takes a pinch of dark brown,
            drops it in a narrow necked bottle
         on a tan layer already poured on top
        of light brown one.    His dark head is
       bowed over his work and he reaches in
      the bottle  with a wire,  touches the sand
      pushes gently, pulls, releases and a camel
     prances on a desert landscape. It only took
      a few seconds and he repeats it all around
     etching a caravan of camels prancing. With
    dark fingers he tweaks up a color from a little
     dish, pours another shade and another, pokes
      with his thin wire patterns in the sand like
         a  starry night-  and he packs it tightly
            compressing the picture and plugs
             it shut with a soft waxy substance
          that hardens and we have a splendid
       little memento that fits firmly in my hand.



 poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab


 

Evening's Drowse

           
        I am filled with-
        shaped by
        the hills.

        They smooth my thoughts
        as each rise leads
        to another
        stretching

        as I soar
        like the sparrow
        my mind capturing image
        after image
        of what we've seen.

        Old hills...

        Black specks become goats
        a stick a shepherd on watch.

        Stones take the shape of sheep
        and sheep take the shape of stones.

        Some hills haven't a speck of green
        just crevices
        that make them look like drapery
        sculpted mounds
        modern art

        then drive down
        and discover other hills
        with dark green conifers-

        old old trees with space underneath
        their lowest oldest branches
        primeval shelter...
        
        Would I see the land the same
        if my pace were constrained to what legs can do-
        
        how far the foot can stumble.    


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

The Nook



        There is a nook,
        a small arced shape
        recessed in the stone wall,
        that holds a graceful urn
        from antiquity.
        
        A sparrow alights on the rim
        comes to sit in the sun,
        comes to sing
        and chatter
        and tell me,
        the shadow form,
        of other days
        when other sparrows
        came to bathe
        in a pitcher's warm wet water.
        
        Came to stir
        and sip
        and delight
        in my sleepiness
        as the sun stretches
        and the shadow becomes self.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Calmly Cruising



    We're on our way to
    take a buggy ride:

    Calmly cruising,
    in our sport utility vehicle,
    on the edge of a mountain top road
    that will takes us down
                towards Petra...

    Jaffar catches the blast
    of sonic boom:
    He steers the Land Rover off
            onto the dusty berm,
    and thrusts the gear into park.  
    He leaps up and out, detecting the trace
    of two gleaming gray jets as they pierce
    sound and sight chasing speed-

    A tilting metallic glimmer through
    the deep canyon of red rock at our feet.

    The two jets cut long swathes of space
    as straight as a Roman Road Airborne.
    Pitch and roll and flash past,
        dazzling my dazed husband
    who slumps back into the car
    muttering that he never thought
    he'd ever see
    a jet perform
    
            below his feet.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Petra


        Our little boys like
        camel rides
        and scramble climbing on ancient ruins.
        So many places to ramble...

        So beautiful, especially
        the spring flowers
        that grow everywhere,
        even out of rock and
        Roman ruins.
        
        History is everywhere you look
        and our little boys like
        fiddling with stones:
        They fill their pockets.
        
        Outside the Grand Treasury that rises
        from rosy shades of sandstone
        into a precisely carved edifice
        of aesthetic sensitivity unsurpassed...


        Our little boys glance up briefly
        and then browse back at the ground,
        eyes absorbed in the trove of little stones-
        eager little hands
        clutch
        all they can.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Sandstone



        We walk in a valley
        surrounded by cliff walls carved
        with Nabotean caves
        and Roman edifices...


        Incredible architecture all
        soaring far beyond the reach
        of my outstretched hand
        as my grappling mind
        climbs up sheer pink,
        red and purple cliff faces:
        tombs and temples
        a place of trade.

        Light air filled rock
        that makes our path pliant,
        and crumbles as I reach down into it-
        dissolves as I lift a small soft stone:

        I show our young sons
        how to make
        sand from stone...

        And the youngest
        spends the rest of the day
        in this spectacular expanse
        of carefully sculpted stone
        
        veering towards rocks to crunch.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Friday, January 21, 2022

To ride a camel



        To ride a camel
        is to smile and nod
        at the bedecked Bedouin
        and his equally bedecked beast:
       
You signal with a coin
        and he signals with a stick
        and the great beast bends his knees backwards
        settling to the ground in a most unsettling way.

        You reach up with your leg
            over the camel's steep back,
        and hurl yourself astride-


        Hold on, eyes blaring and nose blinking
                                       as the mountainous beast lunges forward                 

 then back 

                    and up 

                                            and all at once and you are higher
                    than any head
                    and your heart is pounding
                    pounding pounding
                    from the unexpected shift
                    that seemed more like a spill-

        And what's most frightening
is knowing that getting down
        will be exceptionally more disconcerting.
               

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Clarion



        My fair face
        hasn't the power
        to survive this blare of sun
        and I blush-
        
        burnt with defeat.

        My pale eyes
        haven't the strength...
        I can only squint
        in the bright light:
        
        I can't see colors as they should be,
        
        just recollections
        of what lines usually lead to
        and shapes should divulge.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Bumps



        Bumps
        hills
        mountains-
        all roll
        but some
        are ancient cities,
        civilizations
        buried
        thousands
        of years ago.
        Buildings
        that blazed
        in the desert sand

        becoming
        sand.

        Have I held a palace
        in my hand?

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

The Turk's Railroad



        The Turk's railroad
        is a narrow, small,
        vulnerable, single rail
        that consumed
        all the trees in Jordan.

        Took away shade
        and shelter
        and furniture
        and tools and food
        and left all that
        wasn't drafted
        to wash away.
        No deep roots
        to hold the soil still.
        No shade
              to protect the weary
        or pregnant or lazy.
        
        They've planted trees again,
        avenues along the road
        borders on property
        and such.
        Trees to take root
        fill the air
        with fragrant greenery
        and flourish.

        There aren't many thick trunks,
        except near old homes,
        occasionally-
        One wizened olive or such,
        sequestered in a courtyard.

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

A Silhouette

 

        A man stood by a tree
        silhouetted by the setting sun:
        A background spun
        from the burning webs
        of some golden fleece
        once prized by legend
        but now left to glow
        among embers
        etching
        a silhouette.



poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Sunset


              
        The sun doesn't
            sink slowly.
        It drops suddenly
        as if pulled
        by an unseen hand.
        
        A grasping grip
        afraid to come up
        beyond the horizon
        
        waiting
        
        as the yellow disc
        up above comes
        closer, 


        taking dusk
        and turning it
        into a passionate
        red-orange.


        When the edge
        of the round red sun
        has slipped past a certain
        point on the landscape's edge
        the unseen hand grabs it
        pulls-


        The sun plunges down
        immediately
        dropped
        away.

        Gray light lingers a bit longer
        fingering the last threads of dusk.

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Mosaics

 
        One hungry lion's roar
        echoes down this dark, domed tunnel.
        The percussion of his paws
        pounds through and out
        into the amphitheater:
        In Roman times.

        I am

        marveling
        at excavated images
        I've seen photographed,
        but never touched till now.

        Mosaics.

        I'm struck by the simplicity,
        the space between each tile;
        breath that flows into patterns        
        of leaping creatures
        and saints...

        I stand consumed.

 

 

 

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

The Citadel


        Walk through ruins
        antiquities...
        The earth underfoot
        includes rocks, rubble, and dust,
        pebbles and bits of pottery.
        Shards of archaic lives.
        I reach down
        and my finger's flesh feels
        the warm porous clay.
        I lift it up.
        Long ago this fragment
        was a whole
        hot from the kiln.
        Long ago another woman reached
        and her finger's flesh felt
        the warm porous clay,
        held the earth in her hand
        a vessel to fill...
        as fluid
        reflections
        flow.



poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

 

Published National Library Of Poetry, Anthology- 1992

 

Amman



        The city is
        tightly packed
        with boxes- buildings
        stacked up on hills
        that rise every which way.


        Round hills holding
        cliffs of square white stone structures.


        A canvas of bluffs
        soon to cull colors
        preluding sunset.


        Each blanched building
        diverges with dark squares
        of windows


        where warm people patter
        about within
        everyday lives.



poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

 

Published in River Run Review 2000

Of Amman


        There's an old house in the old city of Amman.
        An old house with a carved stone balcony.
        
        I noticed it-
        an unexpected flash
        a beacon above me
        bright with noon light caught
        by its limestone exterior.
        
        Up on a sharp hillside,
        precipitously wedged
        in time and place.
        
        A simple shape, the only clue
        to it's archaic heritage
        is the carved stone balcony
        a balustrade (often copied)
        that opens out    into carefully constructed stairs.                
        
        Steps systematically notched down the steep hillside.
        Built out of the rock itself, it seems...
        I have no sense of separate foundation,
        no sense of where brick might begin.
        It is as if eons of rain have washed away stone
        in rhythmic patterns, like the snowflake,
        to create the arabesque of the balcony.

        The house, the balustrade,
        and the steps so carefully sculpted
        systematically notched down
        the steep stony hillside-
        A flight methodically
        advancing that
        suddenly
        sharply     
                
                             erodes into air.


 

 

 

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Gold


        In the afternoon
        we go to the Gold Souq.
        
        It's a marketplace not far off.
        We make our way from our car
        adeptly parked several streets over:
        Step off the crowded curbs
        cross the crowded streets.
        Cars zip and lurch
        and we dodge them
        as they dodge us.

        The Gold Souq.
        Stroll on a wide sidewalk
        inundated on every edge
        by gold- exquisite glistening gold
        24 carat shimmering gold...
        
        We've come to buy some charms.
        Gold is gold- but when it lines all the shops,
        surrounds you on each and every side,
        glitters in polished windows,
        gleams down narrow passages...
        When it falls in light chains from your hands
        and bangles on your arms
        and pierces your ears
        and makes your fingers heavy...

        When gold is everywhere
        it is bedazzling, radiating brighter
        than when confined to a single case.
        Ounce by ounce, skillfully crafted, adds up
        from simple circlet to intricately worked necklace:
        It becomes a glorious magnitude   
        and is absolutely
        Resplendent.

 

 

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Downtown Amman

 
         
        Walking on the sidewalk,
        watching the orangey-red


        and yellow tiles alternating...


        Some squares are loose,
        my footing is still firm


        but a spell of clanking echoes


        as we make our way towards
        the narrow shops neatly
        crammed with goods.
        
        I feel like a coin tossed:


        What century  
        is falling all around
        encasing me


        with gold.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Jordan



        Geometry rises
        out of rubble;
        The strength
        of a simple square-
        a home to how many?


        Geometry abruptly
        spills down
        a low round hill,
        recedes into erosion and air.

        Day break brings color
        to dust and rock,
        rolls each silhouette
        with reds.


        Morning goes on to gild
        this ancient land,


        carves the stones
        into embellished shapes,


        chisels details
        with daubs of pigment


        which noon bleaches out
        entirely
        until


        evening shadows
        come back to claim


        line
        & form.


                                                                       poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab


Jerash

   
        
        Soft orange almost white
        limestone chiseled...

        Walk down an avenue of columns
        with curlicue crowns holding up the wide open sky.


        Lean over a wall and see a large mosaic floor
        creeping out of dust and earth.
        
        Trace the edges of crumbled walls,
        outlines of a structure:
        One of many contained in a city
        now pasture land
        for tourists and goats,
        who ever is nimble enough
        to find nourishment
        in this arid clime.
                                     


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab