Tea With the Calligraphy Teacher
By Sally Zakariya
You pour tea into glasses shaped
like tulips in a Turkish painting
bulbous bottom, narrow waist
gentle flare above
the gold on the rim rubbed thin
by the touch of many fingers
Every week your students
bring their lessons and drink
strong black tea, stirring in sugar
holding the glasses lightly
by their faded golden rims
watching the red ink from your
pen bleed across their work
You like to tell them stories
of the old calligraphers
how they copied the sacred texts
how they learned from masters
passing the knowledge on
how they shared the secrets
of the work, the soot ink
the burnished paper, the perfect
pen for every script
Maybe your students will learn the art
or maybe not, but they will learn
respect for the pen’s precise line
for the tea and talk that flow through
their lessons vital as ink, as blood
Sally Zakariya’s poems have appeared in numerous journals, including The Broadkill Review, Edge, Boston Literary Magazine, Emerge, Third Wednesday, Evening Street Review, Southern Women’s Review, and Theodate. Her poetry has won prizes from the Poetry Society of Virginia and the Virginia Writers Club. She has published two chapbooks, Insectomania (2013) and Arithmetic and other verses (2011) and volunteers as poetry editor for Richer Resources Publications, for whom she is currently editing an anthology of poems about food and eating. Zakariya lives in Arlington, Virginia, and blogs at www.butdoesitrhyme.com.