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SKELETON PARK

SKELETON PARK

by Eric Folsom

In the pandemic months we would cut through the park

Without lingering to talk or read on benches,

Moved past yarn-bombed trees and an empty wading pool,

Playground equipment behind Modu-Loc fences.

 

Swings, slides and climbers, now exotic animals

Penned in their enclosure, had formed a static herd,

Their negligent young zookeepers elsewhere detained

Left no tiny footprints in the undisturbed sand.

 

We checked on the health of a dawn redwood sapling

Planted near Patrick Street, enduring the north wind,

Thin leafless sentinel of promises to come,

Bare bones beneath a layer of blue grey lichen.

 

Beneath the grass, unseen molecules of the dead

Reclined and disassembled but did not address

The tragic history of old epidemics,

Untallied victims of cholera and typhus.

 

Dawn redwoods at first were known only as fossils,

Disinterred signals on prehistoric tablets,

But remnant populations were found near Wuhan

And then carried by humans across the planet.

 

In spring our dawn redwood sends out pale green feathers,

Bright delicate fronds in a deciduous cloud,

A transposition of light, like all growing things

A word in translation, the dawn spoken out loud.

About this Poem

Eric’s Note about the poem:

To talk of inspiration around something as serious COVID-19 seems almost cavalier, so let's instead say that I live near McBurney Park and I like to go for walks. I often take note of whatever seems different, and I try to capture those minor observations in words which go into a little pocket sized Moleskin. When everything is working, the notes become lines, and the lines turn into poems. Not as quickly as I would like, but eventually.

Any place can be a site of loss and grief, but McBurney Park has a particular claim. Waves of victims from Kingston's early 19th century epidemics were interred in the Upper Burial Ground, which later became abandoned and later still was turned into a tranquil public park. Vernacular memory has called it Skeleton Park ever since, in offhanded tribute to the dead. Popular imagination provides a ready made emblem, what more could we ask?

About the Poetry in the Time of a Pandemic Project:

Kingston Poet Laureate Jason Heroux has invited four other local poets – Bruce Kauffman, Eric Folsom, Sadiqa de Meijer and Alyssa Cooper – to contribute pandemic-related poetry between now and September as part of a project entitled Poetry in the Time of a Pandemic. The first poem was Jason's "All People" with Bruce Kauffman’s "this morning" as the second, and Sadiqa de Meijer’s "Chronology of the Emergency" as the third.  Watch for Alyssa Cooper’s poem on September 1. 

About the Poetry Blackboard

The Poetry Blackboard showcases poems curated by Kingston's Poet Laureate and written by Kingston poets. There's a new poem every month, written by poets living and dead, historical and contemporary, published and unpublished, adults and children, giving full range to the cultural voice of Kingston. Started in 2015 by Helen Humphreys, the Poetry Blackboard has been continued since 2019 by Jason Heroux.

We wish to thank Helen Humphreys, Kingston's second Poet Laureate, for her generous support of emerging and established poets in Kingston through library programming and our Poetry Blackboard project. Throughout her four years as Poet Laureate, Helen curated a digital collection of poetry to showcase the talents of local creators of all ages, both historic and contemporary. Helen also offered several opportunities for emerging poets to develop their craft, offering group workshops and one-on-one mentorship. Her active engagement with the library and community has been greatly appreciated.

In 2019 we welcomed the incoming Poet Laureate, Jason Heroux, who continues to curate the Poetry Blackboard and to develop new community programming.

Previously Published Poems