How bold the birds of winter--
black crows performing magic
upon bereft fields,
jays
with stolen summer on their backs
taunting the solemn sky.
At home
my aimless mind
writes poemless lines.
Homeless under
trees or sky,
my lines take aim
to fly.
Friday, December 16, 2016
Friday, December 18, 2015
Sunflower Rejoicing Haiku
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Lone Sunflower in a Soy Field by Stanley Crum |
green yields yellow's rejoicing
sunflower joy face.
Sunday, May 24, 2015
The Devotion of a Child
Bring me yarrow and daisies
gathered among the hay,
graced with stems of clover,
blessed on a mild Sunday.
Bring me stones from the creekbed
where salamanders run wild
polished smooth and guileless
as the devotion of a child.
Bring me childlike wonders.
Let me receive them with joy.
Make my perceptions pristine
as a scrape kneed, scapegrace boy.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
The Old Ford in Snow
In the silvery dark
on a night besnowed hill
the usual silence
of snowfalls is filled
with the whir of an engine
riding the ditch
plaintively rising
and falling in pitch.
Watching the snow fall
like unhurried stars--
merciless, heedless
of bald-tired cars--
I unload my worries
into capable hands.
Joe will return soon
with truck, chains, and plans.
I back down the road
that I just failed to climb
to sit by the wayside
passing the time
with wandering thoughts
on the travail of snow
on road weary tires
awaiting a tow.
The old Ford in low gear
sporting locked differentials
makes short work of tall hills.
We have all the essentials:
Home, boys, and car in the drive, safely towed.
We feel the elation
of conquering the road.
on a night besnowed hill
the usual silence
of snowfalls is filled
with the whir of an engine
riding the ditch
plaintively rising
and falling in pitch.
Watching the snow fall
like unhurried stars--
merciless, heedless
of bald-tired cars--
I unload my worries
into capable hands.
Joe will return soon
with truck, chains, and plans.
I back down the road
that I just failed to climb
to sit by the wayside
passing the time
with wandering thoughts
on the travail of snow
on road weary tires
awaiting a tow.
The old Ford in low gear
sporting locked differentials
makes short work of tall hills.
We have all the essentials:
Home, boys, and car in the drive, safely towed.
We feel the elation
of conquering the road.
Friday, November 14, 2014
Secrets I Wish Were Mine
My river is not my river--
my shoal, not my shoal.
It shares with me its unhurried waters,
thoughtful sycamores,
questing vines and courageous willows,
silent under sky, meditating
on their time under the sun.
And I, I scribble these secrets
I wish were mine
always knowing they belong to water
that will give them away to sky.
my shoal, not my shoal.
It shares with me its unhurried waters,
thoughtful sycamores,
questing vines and courageous willows,
silent under sky, meditating
on their time under the sun.
And I, I scribble these secrets
I wish were mine
always knowing they belong to water
that will give them away to sky.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Acorns
Up the hill and down the road
around one bend and then another
boys on bikes and I on foot
as brother chases after brother
'til we reach the silent oak
that feels the sigh of mid September
and gently lets her acorns go
to wait through winter, each an ember
holding onto sparks of spring.
We collect these in our pockets
to plant in pots or string on strings,
to coax to life or give new scope
as parts of arts or crafty things.
We sit there, shaded by the branches,
idly talking in the grass
fitting acorns with berets:
tiny gentlemen trying on hats.
around one bend and then another
boys on bikes and I on foot
as brother chases after brother
'til we reach the silent oak
that feels the sigh of mid September
and gently lets her acorns go
to wait through winter, each an ember
holding onto sparks of spring.
We collect these in our pockets
to plant in pots or string on strings,
to coax to life or give new scope
as parts of arts or crafty things.
We sit there, shaded by the branches,
idly talking in the grass
fitting acorns with berets:
tiny gentlemen trying on hats.
Saturday, September 13, 2014
Nostalgia of Middle September
As if God had turned the world upside down
an ocean of gray cloud floats over our town.
Hinting at blue, an inverted horizon
makes strange fish of all the birds I lay eyes on.
This is one of those in between days
when the sun has gone sly, and is hoarding its rays.
Every breeze holds a scent I remember.
How deep, the nostalgia of middle September.
Cool air through the window, smelling of wishes...
Warm suds on my forearms, plunged deep with the dishes...
Lazily soaping and rinsing a ladle...
Lullabies sway through my mind, like a cradle.
The inhale and exhale of Autumn's first gust,
colored with aster and goldenrod dust:
a peaceful reflection of spirit that brings
the quiet affection of everyday things.
an ocean of gray cloud floats over our town.
Hinting at blue, an inverted horizon
makes strange fish of all the birds I lay eyes on.
This is one of those in between days
when the sun has gone sly, and is hoarding its rays.
Every breeze holds a scent I remember.
How deep, the nostalgia of middle September.
Cool air through the window, smelling of wishes...
Warm suds on my forearms, plunged deep with the dishes...
Lazily soaping and rinsing a ladle...
Lullabies sway through my mind, like a cradle.
The inhale and exhale of Autumn's first gust,
colored with aster and goldenrod dust:
a peaceful reflection of spirit that brings
the quiet affection of everyday things.
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