Suzanne Lummis
When Larry Left Town
a collaborative group poem for Larry Colker from Suzanne Lummis’s Poetry Workshop
my cat called all day
not her usual, commonplace meow,
but a call with a coyote note,
Suzanne Lummisa night-time-creature-with-insomnia-
at-High-Noon note,
and nothing would appease her,
not even Friskies white fish and tuna fillets.
When Larry left town
every marionette sagged on its strings
followed his lanky gait
with painted eyes
wooden sighs.
Mary Fitzpatrickhe winked, and uttered some lines
that lifted their knees and wrists
clattered their limbs and
with his breezy assay
transported.
When Larry Colker left town
was it fate or chance, this relocation,
this alteration in the space/time continuum?
Marilyn RobertsonBack in my own, I watch the ghosts
of his youth dance in jerky simulacrum
to the staccato chattering of the family
projector, images in light neither time
nor space can erase.
When Larry left town
I was on jury duty. Larry
would have liked all the people
who brought books,
silenced their phones,
Cece Periopened doors for each other.
When we stood, the judge asked,
Can you be fair and impartial?
I said, Not today, Your Honor,
I’m just not feelin’ it.
Swear to God.
When Larry left town
I congregated alone in the middle of the street
outside Suzanne’s place like we used to do
in the cool poetry night air
where instead of farewells, we’d made a ritual
Beth Ruscioof repeating the workshop’s winning phrases
unable, or just unwilling to stop
constructing and deconstructing
a stack of words
we would treat
with the reverence of monuments
and cultivating what Larry celebrated—
the triumph of a strong distaff voice.
When Larry left town
we were down a prophet
who could alert us to
bursts of glory, revelation.
The exuberance of that girl
in The Leap—
I remain converted—
waiting for a return
of that rapturous rush,
grateful for his quickening
the girl I still carry.
Am.
the LA sky grew quiet.
Birds followed him
onto the crowded highway,
Sharon Venezioacross the desert,
through the great plains,
navigating by the sound of his poems,
words dancing through the air
like tumbleweeds.
Back in our quiet-skyed city,
we recite amnesia and wings,
thank the winking stars
that beat white against the night.
When Larry Left Town
I headed to the Natural History Museum’s butterfly pavilion
Their riotous colors
their zigs and zags
and one Gray Cracker in a mottled cloak
When Larry left town,
waitresses stalled out on the 405
and howled, coffee pouring
from their hoods. As drivers inched past,
each of them felt a little less
seen.
David Eadington
But Doris wasn't driving; she steered
customers away from the back booth,
where Larry's poems gathered to chat.
She'd be sure to top off their cups,
and idle with them just a while.
Suzanne Lummis is a poet, writer, arts organizer, and teacher in Los Angeles. She leads private workshops and has taught for many years through the UCLA Extension Writers’ program where she evolved courses in poetic craft, the persona poem, and the poem noir (“Poetry Goes to the Movies”). This collaborative poem was generated as a spontaneous tribute by Suzanne Lummis and members of her long-running workshop.