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Joined: Jul 2008 Gender: Female  Posts: 104 Karma: 0 |  | Ella Wagemakers (Sanchez) « Thread Started on Oct 10, 2008, 3:59pm » | |
Ella Wagemakers (Sanchez) Born in Manila, Ella moved to The Netherlands in 1988 and became a Dutch citizen in 1993. She currently teaches English full-time at the Dutch Police Academy. She is the author of Sorrows of the Chameleon , XLibris 2007, ISBN 978-1-4257-4955-2
Ella blogs at http://ellawagemakers.blogspot.com/
![[image] [image]](http://shayepoet.com/conference/filipinapoets/ellawagemakers.jpg)
POEMS FOR THOSE WHO COME TO MY DOOR ASKING FOR DONATIONS
ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE (for Alzheimer Nederland)
How tediously the puzzle falls apart. Piece by piece, corner by corner, whole rows evaporate and are lost. The ceiling becomes the wall, the fountain returns to its youth. Keys lock doors, colours dissolve in the darkroom from which they came. Thoughts unravel, skeins of cobwebs with no beginnings and no ends.
And names are the hardest of all.
CANCER (For the Kon. Wilhelmina Fonds voor de Nederlandse Kankerbestrijding, or the Queen Wilhelmina Fund for the Fight Against Cancer in The Netherlands)
A slow death creeps up my veins, invades my bones, steals into the sanctum of my body. There is a name which men have given this malady but the namelessness of its pain is infinite and full, unknowable and certain, and as the black dust takes root and branches into an infernal tree clouds of sorrow gather above me as thick as a nest of magots.
First published in “Another Morning”, a compilation of poetry for cancer victims by Lanie Shanzyra P. Rebancos, published by Lulu.com, 2006
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HEART DISEASE (For the Nederlandse Hartstichting, or the Dutch Heart Foundation)
To play hangman without a tree; to breathe in a vacuum until the walls shrink to the size of a molecule; to feel life pounding frantically at the gates …
How many last breaths before the last? How many beats per minute? How long before I can no longer keep pace with the seasons?
Soon I may get an extra shot at youth, a plastic pump with a built-in drum, an uneven marriage with a spouse only a few days young.
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MODERN ART (Reykjavik, 2004)
in an Iceland museum I am eating cottage cheese writing haiku strings they are showing a film where people pretend to die hit by bullets of sound
outside it is Monday the ferries have emptied six cars make up traffic inside, walls of cast iron a hall the color of vulcanic ash clear bluish windows
after tea I unfold the labyrinth of streets straight lines and squares on a chessboard of numbers we move from K6 to G3 as the giant stern flies
now to a room of artefacts playing cards, beermats, lighters we leave our fingerprints passing as still life among the glass cases and paintings murmuring in gray
First published at www.coffeepressjournal.com/currentissue/06-sep%20oct.pdf = The Coffee Press Journal, Issue September/October 2006
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"Moods of a March Evening"
I
Listening to a song that was a favourite before I wrote my poems – how different it is now! Running through a field, aura scattered carelessly, wet grass between my toes,
I watch the sun turn west right there behind the hills, its spheres lingering behind on a tray of cake and wine, on a statue of a mother and child, in the bass of a bullfrog – the dying sounds of sunset.
II
Here, amid this rubble, this unsorted pile of bills, memoranda, greeting cards, here is where I will write, on this table, heavy and firm. This is the cave, the wall, where I will leave a handprint, mine, in ochre, burnt red at the edges. In the flickering shadows of the dying fire you will feel me breathing, moving, fingerpainting. Near my hand you will see bison, wild boar, mammoth, the caveman’s verses, the shaman’s prayers, odes to the bow, the spear, the sabre-toothed tiger. On the rough surfaces of the impenetrable rock, on this wide plasma screen, I will not colour by numbers.
III
This March evening even the snow is in bloom; wild white petals drift down, coating all in weightlessness, evening sticks out its tongue to catch the wings of flakes, a chameleon in a coat of sandalwood smoke.
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"On The Road"
Utrecht is pouting this tedious morning. I drive on its lower lip puckered with traffic. Further north, curving, the A1 is an eyebrow leading to the eye, Amsterdam and its ring, with its old harbour, nose clogged with fumes.
The Heuvelrug humps its back. I ride its measured waves valley in, hill out, past the eyelashes of speed cameras, the spine of the A27 stretching further south, its tip curving into Breda, medieval city of kings.
Leaving Rotterdam later, I snake into the A29, the knots of two highways and twelve hours of work loosening behind me, as I cruise and review the hours, the distances, eager for sunrise, another day giftwrapped in asphalt ribbons.
![[image] [image]](http://shayepoet.com/conference/authors/AmbahanonBambooslide1c.jpg)
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