“PORTRAIT IN WATERCOLOR / the inhabitants of houses” by Ave Jeanne Ventresca
Ave Jeanne Ventresca is an American/Italian author of nine chapbooks of poetry reflecting social and environmental concerns. Her award winning poetry has been widely published internationally within commercial and literary magazines, in print and online. She edited the acclaimed literary magazine Black Bear Review, and served as publisher of Black Bear Publications (USA) for twenty years. Poetry from her most recent collection, Noticing The Colors of Ordinary, was nominated for the Pushcart Prize, 2019.
A Word from the Author:
I was revisiting the stories and poems of N. Scott Momaday. His voice urged me into new perceptions on how the building of a dwelling, or house, transfers into a home. People throughout the world are vigilant about the crafting of a good life and the creation of the future in their homes. I extended my thinking on just how homes are decorated with various animate and inanimate objects, meaningful books and photos, aromas from recipes of their culture, and the potent voices of their past.
below this geometry of geese, whose
wings of symmetry crosses
sky all chubby clouds, and within earth
of different shades of brown,
we build houses.
we fill them with bison hides and
reassuring old chairs, coneflowers, and
nights of dancing. to keep them resilient,
every wall owns its own pigment, each
floor contains a certain number of tears,
and intricate patterns of tradition. we give
them inhabitants. allow them dreaming
and anticipation. adorn them with hymns
for unforeseen directions. we call them by
name, pronounce each out loud when we
make love or share faces
with death. we speak
these names, light like feathers, on days
of importance. when throats are dry
and memories many. below these rooftops
we create
purposeful arrangements of adjectives and
nouns to make emotions noticeable to others.
we gather corn, bean, and conversations,
constantly aware how wind flows bold, and
seasons become full.
like large buffalo, we tend to together stand,
in graveyards where silence is the home.
now, relying on weeds and thick roots
to support our heavy skulls.