MAPS by Doug Tanoury (dtanoury@ix.netcom.com) Sister Antonina's map Of the world worked Like a large window shade That pulled down And went up noisily In true window shade fashion, Its roller turning made the sound Of a morning dove cooing, and The map's fabric winding up Were wings flapping. I remember France was green, The Brest jutting out toward England And the North Atlantic. Italy was faded terra cotta, almost a pink, Against a deep blue Adriatic. In fourth grade At Nativity of Our Lord school, I sat in the front desk Where I memorized The shapes of continents and countries. When I passed the map Going to lunch or returning from recess I would run my hand Across the Mediterranean To feel the texture of the fabric And hear the tum-tum sound Of my fingers drumming Against Greece and the Aegean. Occasionally, on toetips and stretching I could brush a finger Along St. Bernard's Pass. I was always sad to hear The morning dove calling And wings flapping As the world retracted To reveal arithmetic problems Or spelling assignments On the blackboard Written in Sister Antonina's Precise penmanship. For reasons that mystify me still, I failed the fourth grade, Although I stuck my hands Into every southern sea, And I touched Athens, And I touched Rome, And something in them Touched me. ------- Visit Doug's Web site, Funky Dog Publishing: http://funkydogpublishing.com/