Tag: Poems about Jazz

  • The Parable of the Mustard Seed, the Chanteuse and Wild Rice by Libby Bernardine

    Can we believe the mustard seed growseidt piaf
    into a large tree producing seed for the birds
    to gather—the ever-present sparrows build
    their nest, shake down the seeds then born
    by wind—many are fed

    The French called Edith Piaf la mone piaf,
    the Little Sparrow, child raised in poverty
    in a brothel, sang her chansons on a street
    corner, and once I saw her at Versailles
    in New York—who was this voice

    in this little frame belting out
    Padam Padam Padam, fist clenched
    in pounding rhythm, her voice
    from across the sea sending
    her song of love, La Vie En Rose

    Wild rice across the street gracefully
    dies, scatters seeds for any of the marsh folk
    to feed as it ages—the sparrow
    chit, chit whistling over near three red roses
    blooming on a bush, three years dormant

    I hear the faint sound of a cricket—
    I call it to me, the faith of its song
    I send it out among the grains.


    Libby Bernardin is the author of Stones Ripe for Sowing (2018, Press 53) and two Chapbooks, one The Book of Myth, chosen by Kwame Dawes. Publications have appeared in The Asheville Poetry Review, Southern Poetry Review, and Kakalak. She has received awards from the Poetry Society of South Carolina, and the North Carolina Poetry Society.