Weekly Poem: Sing no hymns save frog-croaks

Frogs, a sort of mascot for my brother
whose friends called him Hoppy.
One of his tree ornaments,
a frog wearing a Santa hat,
hangs on our tree every Christmas,
near the back.

Flat fields of his youth provided
nowhere to hide, the sky was too close;
so he left muddy rivers, farm ponds
and sloughs to become a frog out of water,
exotic desert amphibian, trying to drown
Vietnam nightly
at the Green Onion Bar.

He knew frogs, we both did,
from fishing trips with our uncle up north.
After dark, we’d go down to a swamp
and grab them with bare hands,
slam them into a gunnysack to be
pike bait next morning.
We got to be good at it.

Once, during frog mating season,
we suffered frog croaks all night long.
What little sleep we managed was full
dreaming—frog as changeling,
that metamorphosis trick they do, tadpoles
becoming something they’re not, frogs
turning into princes the way young men
turn into soldiers overnight.

Making a joke of it, he liked to say
one day he’d been a goof-off student
at Eureka College, next
he’d found himself in a jungle full of Vietcong
quivering so much it was hard
to hold on to his weapon.
Brother, if only we had known
the language of frogs, then maybe
you wouldn’t have died alone
and too young. Maybe there was salvation
in those raucous croaks—
second chances, bountiful mercies,
metamorphosis for lost souls.




This piece was written by:

Linda Whittenberg's photo

Linda Whittenberg

Linda Whittenberg grew up in Illinois farm country and lived for periods of time both east and west before finding her heart's home in the mountains and deserts of New Mexico. Her story involves experiences that might led to a cautious life, but, to the contrary, she has followed an adventurous path with unpredictable turns and unexpected rewards. The various roles she has played as wife, mother, grandmother, teacher, and Unitarian Universalist minister have all become fertile sources for poems.

Since retiring from full-time work in ministry, she has lived just outside Santa Fe, NM, in a rural setting with her husband, Bob Wilber; Sancho, her husband's mule; goat, Obie; and two cattle dots, Tillie and Drover. The entire family enjoys long mountain hikes in the Pecos Wilderness. She and her husband met dancing over 25 years ago and still dance weekly with a large circle of country-western dancing friends.

Linda is an active participant in the community of Santa Fe writers. Her work has been published widely in poetry journals and anthologies: Sin Fronteras; Writers without Borders; Passager; Manzanita Quarterly; Spoon River Poetry Review; New Mexico Poetry Review; Pudding Magazine; Lunarosity, and The Familiar, an anthology pubilshed by The People's Press.

Contact Linda Whittenberg

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