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The Ukulele

I was talking about family with Robert over lunch,

how I had traveled to Oklahoma to be the minister

at Aunt Opal’s funeral, sing old hymns

like my family did in the Church of the Nazarene—

the six of us next to the pulpit while mom played

the ukulele, which she learned in Hawaii as a young teacher.

Robert, with his eye for keeping family alive in verse

said you should put that in a poem, the ukulele,

you know, how odd in a church, and this was the way

of my family, always a little odd but with a kind of music.

Four strings of siblings, my father the wood, my mother

the one strumming us into sound. I remember

swaying on the raised platform adjacent the pulpit,

my mother plucking the ukulele while we sang

they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength,

they shall mount up with wings as eagles which,

with a ukulele sounded almost heretical.

But this was our beauty: a string, a person, a chord,

a family twining the exotic, the novel,

into new tradition. Years later, making Opal

a family video, we gathered in the Japanese hexagon

my father built, singing the old hymn again

with mom’s ukulele, but humorously,

dancing Mexican puppets punctuating

the air with raised fists as we sang,

our lives resonant with quirky joy.

This is what I was thinking,

looking at Robert over tea, the way family

endures, quivering as a plucked string—

the ukulele almost tangible, humming

in the air between us.

Dane Cervine’s poems have received awards from Adrienne Rich and Tony Hoagland; last year one of his poems won second place in the Caesura contest. His work has appeared in a wide variety of journals, including The SUN and The Hudson Review; in Buddhist, Pagan, Christian and Atheist magazines; and on the web. Look for newly published work in February’s edition of The SUN, as well as the local Red Wheelbarrow. Dane’s book The Jeweled Net of Indra was published by Plain View Press, and more of his work can be viewed on his website at www.DaneCervine.typepad.com. His poem ‘The Ukelele’ was a finalist this year in the Atlanta Review‘s International poetry competition.

‘Santa Cruz Poets, Santa Cruz Inspiration’ is edited by Robert Sward. Contributions are by invitation.

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