KNOT Magazine
Fall Issue 2022
Janet Ruth Heller
Nature Walk at Shenandoah National Park, August 2010
(For Patricia Clark and Miriam Pederson)
Alert for wildlife,
we emerge from our cabin,
take paths across forests and meadows.
We find a doe and her fawn
under a tall tree,
nibbling green Milam apples.
A crowd gathers.
We see movement among the leaves,
look for squirrels. No—
A black bear sits on a branch,
yanking and gobbling fruit,
dropping some for the deer.
At Miller's Pub
Nestled in the heart
of the Chicago Loop,
Miller’s Pub has served meals
and beer since 1935.
Visitors leave autographed pictures
above the tables full of beef, salads,
seafood, pies, and sausage.
Patti Page gazes wistfully at diners
from a gilt-edged frame
while Fred Waring smiles benignly nearby.
But most of the photos capture
little-known actors or singers,
brave local legends
who lost the high-stakes game
in New York or Hollywood.
As they strut in spangled costumes,
the starlets appeal
to hungry business groups,
tourists, and shoppers
for a moment of homage.
Elegy for Dad
My heart is in the east,
But I’m in the uttermost west.
--Judah Ha-Levi
It’s a sunny August day in Michigan,
but my heart’s in Arizona
where my father lies dying.
This old World War II soldier
has fought four battles with cancer.
The score was three to zero
until a tumor invaded his stomach.
He’s too frail now for surgery or radiation,
and no one can always defeat
the Angel of Death.
I visited a week ago.
We played cards and talked for hours.
He told me about the fraternity
that lost interest because he was Jewish
and the sly college roommate
who set Dad’s alarm for 3 a.m.
Surprised to find no one in the library,
my father realized the prank.
He loved working with his father at Milprint
and later piloting the family firm
with my brother Will.
Dad explained how he made maps
for General Patton and checked for mistakes.
Laughing, Dad recalled that he knew
which men had been drinking
or gallivanting after curfew,
so he proofread their work
and found many errors.
I had never felt closer to Dad.
My last night in Phoenix,
Dad was too tired to play bridge,
his favorite game.
I phone Will to get an update.
My brother weeps,
powerless to stop Dad’s slide
toward endless sleep.
In the Nursing Home
We moved my mother-in-law into a nursing home
after she turned ninety.
Rheumatoid arthritis and Parkinson’s Disease
make it impossible for her to dress herself
or tie her shoes.
Glaucoma transforms every room
into a dark cavern,
and deafness prevents her from hearing
most conversations, much less a burglar.
At her home, she fell often
and could not get up.
The nursing home is clean and new,
staff members kind.
Aides lead exercises designed
to boost memory.
Local children visit,
and buses take residents
to concerts and plays.
But old age is cruel.
Mom asks us twice
which day of the week it is
and forgets to insert her hearing aids.
Other residents wander
in the halls until a staff member
guides them to the lounge
or back to their rooms.
Those who can think clearly
can barely move,
and those who can walk
have disjointed thoughts.
We bring dinner and a cake
to the nursing home
for her ninety-first birthday.
But she can’t blow out the candles
and can’t decipher
most of our words.
Surrounded by people,
she feels more and more alone.
Music Lessons
When I was six,
Oma taught me to perform
songs like “Georgie Porgie”
on her grand piano.
I loved to hear Oma play
grown-up pieces
by Mozart and Schumann,
to watch her long fingers scurry
over the black and white keys.
Three years later,
Mom found balding Mr. Sears
to give me piano lessons.
I walked to his dark home
on Thursdays after school.
Though I practiced constantly,
Mr. Sears scowled like an ogre.
Every time I hit a wrong note,
he growled, “Another mistake!
Repeat that piece until you get it right.”
When I entered his brick house
with thick curtains,
my chest tightened.
My frightened fingers shook
and struck false chords.
After six months,
Mom realized that Mr. Sears
terrified me.
She found Mrs. Thompson,
who smiled, spoke gently,
and did not lose her temper
when my fumbling fingers
landed on the wrong keys.
Mrs. Thompson made piano exciting again.
I flourished in her sunny studio
at the Wisconsin Conservatory
with a grand piano and a picture window.
Mrs. Cohn was the music teacher
at Cumberland School.
Young and beautiful, she taught us
a good morning song,
a song about pigeons walking in the rain,
a song about Christopher Columbus,
songs from Norway and Taiwan.
Always smiling, she made the classroom glow.
I also sang in the choir
at Congregation Sinai.
We practiced early on Sundays
before religious school.
We learned songs for Shabbat,
Chanukah, Purim, and Shavuot.
My favorite director, Mrs. Forman,
chose music with complicated harmonies
and led us with vigor.
She liked my soprano voice and said,
“Next year, I want you to do a solo.”
But the older students hated
her strict rules.
Mrs. Forman told us, “Focus on me,
even if the president comes to our practice room.”
Marcy shot back rudely, “If President Eisenhower came,
I would go and ask for his autograph.”
The next year, Mrs. Forman disappeared.
Did she quit in frustration,
or did Marcy and the other big kids
complain and get her fired?
I missed my wise mentor.
I no longer run my fingers
over piano keys every afternoon.
But I still sing with friends and family.
In my alto voice, I chant Torah and lead prayers
at the synagogue, fulfilling
Mrs. Forman’s promise
five decades ago.
Many years of music lessons
taught me to love the patterns
of sound and rhythm,
the syncopation and arpeggios
that now resonate in my poems.
Elegy for a ’Possum
For weeks, we had found
tiny paw prints
coming up our snow-covered sidewalk,
climbing the porch step,
proceeding west
around our house,
and crossing the back yard.
We thought the paws
belonged to a kitten.
But the kind people on our block
would never abandon
such a young pet.
One February night
at ten o'clock, we met
the creature: a small ’possum
slowly walking toward us.
His eyes drooped
as if he were sad,
and his white face
glowed starkly in the porch light.
He slowly grew
to adult size and strength.
We heard his grunts
like barks of a dog with a cold.
Sometimes we encountered him
when carrying our scraps
to the compost bin
or when we returned
from a late walk
to find the ’possum
in our garden.
Every summer, the creature
took a shortcut
across our front lawn,
wearing a diagonal path
from the driveway to the porch.
Every winter, we traced
his tracks in the snowfall,
noting his short legs
and his dragging tail.
This spring, we think he fell ill
or fought with a cat
or got hit by a car.
Our neighbors found his body
wedged under their ramp.
We buried him in our woods
with full honors.
Janet Ruth Heller is the president of the Michigan College English Association. She has a Ph.D. in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago. She is a past president of the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature. She has published three poetry books: Exodus (WordTech Editions, 2014), Folk Concert: Changing Times (Anaphora Literary Press, 2012), and Traffic Stop (Finishing Line Press, 2011); a scholarly book, Coleridge, Lamb, Hazlitt, and the Reader of Drama (University of Missouri Press, 1990); a middle-grade fiction chapter book for children, The Passover Surprise (Fictive Press, 2015, 2016); and a fiction picture book for children about bullying, How the Moon Regained Her Shape (Arbordale, 2006; 6th edition 2018), that has won four national awards, including a Children’s Choices award. Her website is https://www.janetruthheller.com