Friday, July 7, 2017

A poet in prose


"Always be a poet, even in prose." 
-Charles Baudelaire

Succinct                                   Finger words attempt to grasp the shape
                                                or solidify some things that matters
                                                enough to cast shadows.
Withheld itself                        Where we have both eyes
                                                and this simultaneous process of thingness,
                                                the space it takes when ones eyes are closed
                                                or looking too long at any thing,
                                                turns to creamains, a small pile, still smolders.
In rote repose                           Mind over matter is when matter takes hold
                                                of our mind and an argument ensues,
                                                this circular discourse becomes a deep rut,
                                                here we go again, making a smile with left overs.
Umbra                                     The darkest parts, those chunky photons assembled
                                                from all particulars and are open to letting the light
                                                expending the conservation in equal distribution
                                                of temperature into background
Where loss of certainty           as love and mild.
Makes one move around         Musical chairs taught us how to listen
                                                while in a hurry to save ourselves and
                                                change our point of view without preference
                                                for any place other than staying in the game.
Look                                        Listen.

Within                                      Many layers of glass make mirrors. 





Painting By Paul Fischer [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

ante meridiem


The first crows of day take flight,
Gliding across the cool metal morning sheet
Confidence rises cool and aloof,
Early raw and pink dissipates like sunrise,
awakening forges
Here to face another view of this again,

All anew and alloyed with quill. 




Photo By Hillebrand Steve, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Public domain images website) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

Thursday, July 6, 2017

No gift receipt


Give me
a dry wood chair sitting in the filtered summer sun...
Give me
a dry chair in the summer sun and a thin book of dense poetry to peruse...
Give me
a dry chair in the summer sun with some poetry to read and my blue cat upon my lap,
smiling.
Give me
a wood chair in the filtered sunlight with some sweet poetry and a fat happy cat along with a fuzzy soft peach sweating sugar at hand...
Give me
a warm chair in a little shade, some sweet words and a light breeze, along with a little purring, sticky lips from stone fruits, and the tiny taps of beak smacking mocking birds...
Give me
a chair in the sun, sweet poetry to sink my teeth into, a comfortable cat and a bleeding pen that simply translates all the birds' words,
then I am spoiled
in a shower of gifts,
sated and barefoot in the Bermuda.



Painting by Béla Iványi-Grünwald, 'Lady sitting in the arbor' (1903) in [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Versus Verses


Clearly, there are differences.
None of us is part of the amalgam.
Equal is not the same
as same as, but in lieu of
just as good.
With nothing to lose,
save the uniform of reason,
we could all bare the truth
as bad as we may see
this in them.


Painting by Jean François de Troy, (1735) in [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

Rae of sight


She was the one who spotted
a fawn in the thicket.
She felt watched and sought the source.
Her eyes pulled up to the top cap of a cement post
where a cat has perched his torso behind a trees' trunk,
she catches a green flash and but holds it like a butterfly.
She did not smell the smoke since she was not there,
she pointed out the scorched earth,
noting the stain of fire.
The marine layers danced in choral lines
without fear of heights,
her sights set upon cirrus clouds,
she traces her lips over the shape of words
forming patches on her salted skin,
she is alone in wondering
how to move the world
without making a sound.


Painting by Franz Marc, 'Deer in aMonasteryy Garden' (1912) in [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

Vapors and Vice


The hole in the ozone is still there.
Scientists are scratching their heads,
growing again.
It never changed our view anyway.
We caught no breeze, the barometer hovered
as it had, the particulars were all accounted for.

This is us, inside
a paneless window that doesn’t divide
out and in and even
if we were told an escape hatch had been made
none would climb up and peak,
resisting gravity
for a chance at Vertigo.

We have proven with balloons and bubbles
so much depends upon a human to wield his barrow,
display his collections,
vend his hot wares and drop his cool coins
in finite jest.

Planes and boats, both heavier than conscience
will float, but we must hold our breath.
Balls drop the same, roughly we round up
all the probabilities
and project our tiny lights towards metaphors of
eternally, outside of the time.

Separating by degree
and elevation, those that climb the walls
and those that sink their souls
in the sand, focused on forever
slipping away,
while worried about the whole.


This image or media file contains material based on a work of a National Park Service employee, created as part of that person's official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government, such work is in the public domain.

Sunday, July 2, 2017

Finely printed news


The woman with the thin narrow hands
trimmed and nude nails,
received the good news
And here she was
spent
and broke.
She was tired and should have slept,
instead, she nearly died
with the pen in between her fingers
and raw knuckles.
Even this was half expected,
she thought the words were enough
but they did not touch her in a good way.



Drawing credit by Ernest Blaikley (1916) in [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

Half-dozen Mud cakes

Back to wood decks, quarter-size spiders, webs, moss  and creatures stirring in the hollow nights Back to no side-walks and skirting into th...