Ode to…..
George Bradford Patterson is a lecturer of English as a Second(ESL)/English as a Foreign Language. He has a Masters Degree in Language Education with a Concentration in English as a Second Language from Rutgers – The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA, May, 1982. He has taught EFL/ESL in universities , colleges, languages institutes, and an international school in Mexico, Colombia, Perun, China, Honduras, Korea, and in the US at Temple University in the Writing Program, Fall Semester, 1983; Beaver College, Pennsylvania, 1984; and as a Substitute ESL Teacher in the Philadelphia Public School System, 1984. He’s retired and lives in Nueva Ecija Province, Central Luzon, Philippines.
Ode to Our Salt
This salt
in the shaker.
We saw it in our sea,
and smelled it
in it,
in our buckets
of fish, shrimp, oysters, clams, squids, and crabs,
on our sails,
on our spar,
on our prow,
on our stern,
and from the breeze
Perhaps
you’re not going to believe us,
but it sings,
salt sings, the skin
of the sea
sings
with a mouth filled
with water
and covered by algae
and adorned by coral.
We shivered in those labyrinths
of solitudes,
wandering
hither and thither,
when we heard
the voice
of the salt
in the bay.
Near Legaspi
the whole
sea
reverberate
It is a
sweet
voice,
a song
filled
with softness,
wit,
wistfulness,
wisps of smiles,
and bliss.
Then in its caverns
the gem salt, temple
of a buried light,
transparent palace,
crystal of the sea, oblivion
of the whispering waves.
And thus on every table
in our world,
salt
your lithe
substance
sprinkling
bright light
over
our food.
Preserver
of the old
supplies of ships,
you were
an explorer
in the ocean,
the first
thing to move
into the unfamiliar half-open
trails of the foam.
Dust of the sea, through you,
A kiss caresses the tongue
from the sea evening :
taste blends your oceanic-essence
into each seasoned morsel
and therefore the least,
smallest wave
from the salt shaker
teaches us
not only its native whiteness,
but the basic flavor of the everlasting.
Albay Province, Legaspi City, Bicol, Philippines, July, 2009
Ode to our Tomato
The street,
market,
sari sari store,
filled with tomatoes,
morning,
midday,
dry season,
the light
opens
in two
halves
of tomato,
the juice
flows
through the streets,
alleys,
and paths.
In November,
the tomato breaks loose,
overruns
the kitchens,
takes charge of lunches,
rests
comfortably
on counters,
among the cups,
the shrimp paste dishes,
the banana ketchup bottles,
the soy sauce containers.
It has
its special light,
an amiable majesty.
Sorrowfully, we have to
slay it:
the knife
plunges
into the living flesh,
it is a maroon
viscera,
a cool,
vivid,
infinite
sun
permeates the salad
of the Philippines
is blithely married
to the clear onion,
and to celebrate,
oil
allows itself,
descend,
daughter and quintessence
onto the semi-open hemispheres,
pepper
adds
its perfume,
salt its magic:
it is the day's engagement,
kamote tops,
raises
tall flags,
sweet potatoes
vigorously boil
with its redolence,
the milkfish
batters
on the door,
it's our time!
Let's start!
and on
the table, in the ribbon
of dry season,
the tomato,
eminence of earth
repeated
and fecund
golden star,
its gyrations,
its estuaries,
the splendid
and the copiousness
without dimness,
without spots,
without scales or thorns,
the gift
of its flaming color
and the universality of its coolness.
Central Luzon, Philippines, July, 2013
Ode to the Eggplant
to Berthe Patterson & Eduardo G. Araullo
Eggplant,
luminous tube
your beauty formed
by dark violet gown,
thick interior flesh expanded you,
and in the solitude of the dark earth
your oval body grew long with water
Inside the earth
the miracle
occurred
and when your awkward
green stem appeared,
and your stalk was born
like a spear
in the garden,
the earth piled up her power,
illustrating your nude opaqueness
and as the distant stream ,
in raising the breasts of Aphrodite
duplicated the mango
sodid the earth
make you,
eggplant,
as unclear as Saturn,
and destined
to glow,
constant constellation,
oval long bag of earth’s flesh,
upon
the table
of the poor
Hospitably,
you undo
your tube of freshness
in the ardent consummation
of the cooking pot,
and the dark violet red gown
in the fiery heat of the oil
transformed into a drooping crimson stalk.
Then, too, I will remember how fecund
is your impact upon the love of the salad,
and it appears that the azure helps
by providing you the shape of willows
to celebrate your chopped brilliance
upon the hemisphere of a tomato.
But within reach
of the hands of common persons,
sprinkled with pepper,
brushed
with a bit of salt,
you slay the hunger
of the daily-laborer on his harsh path.
Star of David of the poor,
prince
wrapped
in delicate
apparel, you rise from the ground
like Lazarus
everlasting, whole, pure
like an astral seed,
and when the kitchen bolo
slices you,
there emerges
the tear,
with joyousness.
You make us weep with your inner beauty.
We have lauded all that exists,
but to me, eggplant, you are
more beautiful than a condor
of resplendent feathers,
you are to our eyes
a celestial pipe,
a ruby chalice,
a swift dance
of the phosphorescent jaguar
and the fragrance of the earth lives
in your alcoholic glow.
Central Luzon, Philippines, April, 2013
Falcon's Ashes
Arslan Tahir Qureshi, PakistanOde to…..
Geroge Patterson, US/The Philippines