In creating, the only hard thing's to begin...
-James Russell Lowell
You are Adam
and
I am Eve,
pre-fall
and so
vigil held in
pre-nostalgia
waned with wick of wariness,
lessening into daybreak's risk,
and light rising, I signed
the words, I love you,
then spoke them plain
saying all I never thought
I would.
Because lathered in your
before and after
kisses,
somehow
what once gushed
syrupy
seems now likely.
So, here I am, in the wiggle room
of luck,
believing in the blessing,
given
not
by choice or virtue,
but won
by fight,
and the danger of practicality,
looming just above-
ever easing.
I offer to wisdom all previous
grieving,
repossess
the wonder.
There is suffering
still to steer,
I'm sure,
but together
we
row rapids
of redemption,
each wave of what
once was
and
reaching
graveyard of the end
of what
was once
before,
we'll dig up vision's
bones,
breathe bloom
into the stilted mouths of
mocking cynics.
We will
laugh at sighs and stretching
silence,
because now,
voice,
legitimized,
and artificial phrases,
yes, sublimest art.
More is more, and I will serve you
happily
in return for heart,
because you never gave up
chase,
and catching me,
you held me long in hidden gap,
wove, like craft, a frame of healing,
waited out derangement
of my feverish cries
and I
survived.
So, now I give my life to you,
my love,
undo
softly, gently,
false covering of figs,
abandon fear.
I spill more sumptuous
than the fruit
I
tempted with, and ask forgiveness.
Press hard your hips to mine,
your lips to mine,
and know the way
by memorizing feel of features.
Know me in the dark and light,
in the cycles
of our hours,
our habits of formation.
Hear me
in our modern.
In
my notes
slipped into sack lunch
vows I've never uttered.
Keep them close
as you do my body
in between the sheets
in early morning
segue.
Taste like lasting taffy,
the sweetness of my thoughts,
watch my fingers spell
in lieu of
lines
the pretty gathering of sonnets
and regard attempts,
however lowly, to call you home.
Eat with me newly granted
knowledge,
and when spent from toil,
return
to Eden's bed.
The Sunday Whirl
Monday, November 25, 2013
Friday, November 22, 2013
Winter Journey
I came in through the snow, my footsteps quickly fading.
I saw, on my way, that old tree leaning, dusted,
paling, and our initials carved were covered only
barely.
I brushed aside the white so you'd remember.
I listened for the solo note of frost finch floating
so I could follow.
I found the door with message
thawing in the dawn
but made it out. I waited among the elms
and all of nival ilk. I waited long
and worried you were lost.
I should not have left. I circled the vast
and colorless expanse, returned
and knocked to no response. I, then,
with one finger, traced words into the sleek freeze
on window and left again,
the cold gnathic aching blowing
as if predicting death.
I could feel your absence. I let my heart beat widowed,
just to know it. I turned against
the wind,
its blast all that broke the terrifying muteness
of the land.
I needed joy.
I needed you.
I stopped and stood alone
in this somber
silence
and watched the eerie
powder snow gently take out canvas.
I worried you'd forgotten where we were to meet,
where I met you last, four seasons past.
I planned calendar year around
return.
I memorized your face, this place, but not your meaning.
I held the heat and lied. I met you in mess of romance.
I observed your wounds with my hands. I placed yours
where mine were matching.
I came back in winter,
came in pitch black night in bleak of chill,
needing fire.
I will kiss you alive when I find you.
I have arrived.
I saw, on my way, that old tree leaning, dusted,
paling, and our initials carved were covered only
barely.
I brushed aside the white so you'd remember.
I listened for the solo note of frost finch floating
so I could follow.
I found the door with message
thawing in the dawn
but made it out. I waited among the elms
and all of nival ilk. I waited long
and worried you were lost.
I should not have left. I circled the vast
and colorless expanse, returned
and knocked to no response. I, then,
with one finger, traced words into the sleek freeze
on window and left again,
the cold gnathic aching blowing
as if predicting death.
I could feel your absence. I let my heart beat widowed,
just to know it. I turned against
the wind,
its blast all that broke the terrifying muteness
of the land.
I needed joy.
I needed you.
I stopped and stood alone
in this somber
silence
and watched the eerie
powder snow gently take out canvas.
I worried you'd forgotten where we were to meet,
where I met you last, four seasons past.
I planned calendar year around
return.
I memorized your face, this place, but not your meaning.
I held the heat and lied. I met you in mess of romance.
I observed your wounds with my hands. I placed yours
where mine were matching.
I came back in winter,
came in pitch black night in bleak of chill,
needing fire.
I will kiss you alive when I find you.
I have arrived.
Punctuates
The rain first falls wishful,
wanting more.
More than the sidewalk,
more than the gutter, more than the elementary
school blacktop
empty now of lanky players.
It falls wistful
like
a grandmother breathing,
yearning
for marshes; dry, praying
prairies;
forgotten ghost town
forests.
Lacking these,
the rain jockeys
for attention, pounds
the storm
takes the city siege,
sends drops down
in droves,
driving citizens toward safety.
People rush awkwardly for cover;
hurrying
though careful of the slippery pavement,
and the brimming puddles.
The murky morning,
warning enough for fools,
clouds
constructing mood,
though most paid no mind, ignored
the smattering, rolling roars,
distant but close enough to hear.
Now the rain grows into rhythm,
heckling
with her timing and her beat
all
unlucky souls huddled under quagmire
and awnings.
A few brave pedestrians
with their umbrellas and their purpose
march on through the magic
happening
between the cracks
where the soil silkens.
The people
befuddled by the weather
though it has run for eons on such
cyclical
systems.
The people with their gear, lamenting
frizzing hair
like moisture is akin to electric shock.
The writers
isolating in their safe house
coffee shops, penning sulky
stories,
adding for affect a necessary storm,
like their minds
are individual nations unsurpassed
and can only thrive at selective span
and far away from others.
The people feigning casualty
walking slow like they don't care.
The stuffy, puffy business folk
peeking out
bespattered
windowpanes,
huffing, checking watches,
wondering
if they can still make lunches.
And just across the downtown street
of the high rise buildings
sit the sleazy bars
where patrons come rain or shine.
Some weathering the deluge
just to get their whisky, rum, their gin.
The rain
respects this - at least they thirst.
Their counterparts across the way only know
of hunger
and not a thing of pain.
The rain ceases razor pelt, falls short
and punctuates.
The Sunday Whirl
wanting more.
More than the sidewalk,
more than the gutter, more than the elementary
school blacktop
empty now of lanky players.
It falls wistful
like
a grandmother breathing,
yearning
for marshes; dry, praying
prairies;
forgotten ghost town
forests.
Lacking these,
the rain jockeys
for attention, pounds
the storm
takes the city siege,
sends drops down
in droves,
driving citizens toward safety.
People rush awkwardly for cover;
hurrying
though careful of the slippery pavement,
and the brimming puddles.
The murky morning,
warning enough for fools,
clouds
constructing mood,
though most paid no mind, ignored
the smattering, rolling roars,
distant but close enough to hear.
Now the rain grows into rhythm,
heckling
with her timing and her beat
all
unlucky souls huddled under quagmire
and awnings.
A few brave pedestrians
with their umbrellas and their purpose
march on through the magic
happening
between the cracks
where the soil silkens.
The people
befuddled by the weather
though it has run for eons on such
cyclical
systems.
The people with their gear, lamenting
frizzing hair
like moisture is akin to electric shock.
The writers
isolating in their safe house
coffee shops, penning sulky
stories,
adding for affect a necessary storm,
like their minds
are individual nations unsurpassed
and can only thrive at selective span
and far away from others.
The people feigning casualty
walking slow like they don't care.
The stuffy, puffy business folk
peeking out
bespattered
windowpanes,
huffing, checking watches,
wondering
if they can still make lunches.
And just across the downtown street
of the high rise buildings
sit the sleazy bars
where patrons come rain or shine.
Some weathering the deluge
just to get their whisky, rum, their gin.
The rain
respects this - at least they thirst.
Their counterparts across the way only know
of hunger
and not a thing of pain.
The rain ceases razor pelt, falls short
and punctuates.
The Sunday Whirl
Labels:
desire,
nature,
personification,
poetry,
rain,
The Sunday Whirl,
want,
water
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
The Gift
You strode in,
self-possessed,
surprised
me daily with your persistence,
sowing
seeds of patience
in this bucolic land
where I had
set up camp,
my nomadic
heart meaning only
to repose a while.
You, like you
were born here, knew
the paths -the way
through grassy dells,
and wooded vale.
You took
my hand
and led me
when the
sun would set, navigating
shadows nimbly with map of grace.
My fear kept me trailing ever behind,
groaning over distance,
grumbling with
each step
while you
simply hummed happy
and pushed
on,
half pulling me alongside
rilling streams and up the rocky
crags.
When did I yield?
Realize this was now my home?
Maybe,
when, at last, one midnight journey, I buckled, fell
sobbing to my knees, fatigued.
Gently,
you took my
face
in hands so
strong,
kept your steady gaze for
what seemed years,
until the tears
stopped and dried.
Dumbfounded by
this
sheer kindness, I rested
halfway between that pasture where
you had found me and the hilltop destination where
each morning pink would break and you would
spread your arms out,
palms held open,
proudly show me valley below,
as if this moment was brand new.
We would
then descend,
aurora's colored clouds
completely lost on
me and, too, the height, the why
of this recurrent
tour,
the
space beneath
the peak and the return by stars.
But that
night you touched my face,
and
I slept,
I had visions of yours
and then knew
I had seen it before.
So, as the moon hung low
and shining, I woke revived,
anticipating
arrival and
with purpose,
tried
to match your stride.
This time,
atop the hill, the lights mixing, creating prismatic display of dale,
I understood.
We held
hands
and looked up at the
great sun rising,
flooding the sky in fire,
and in that instant,
I knew
what I had missed each time before.
The grain
stood out
with dignity,
waving,
so far down, glowing now golden
where before, it had seemed drab
and merely brown,
the meadow,
malachite and now flowering with promise,
the small rivers, coursed with force.
I realized it was all yours
and you were giving it to
me.
The evening excursions the necessary means by which to grant this
gift,
for now I saw the others.
Waiting.
I,
now,
would guide.
The Sunday Whirl
self-possessed,
surprised
me daily with your persistence,
sowing
seeds of patience
in this bucolic land
where I had
set up camp,
my nomadic
heart meaning only
to repose a while.
You, like you
were born here, knew
the paths -the way
through grassy dells,
and wooded vale.
You took
my hand
and led me
when the
sun would set, navigating
shadows nimbly with map of grace.
My fear kept me trailing ever behind,
groaning over distance,
grumbling with
each step
while you
simply hummed happy
and pushed
on,
half pulling me alongside
rilling streams and up the rocky
crags.
When did I yield?
Realize this was now my home?
Maybe,
when, at last, one midnight journey, I buckled, fell
sobbing to my knees, fatigued.
Gently,
you took my
face
in hands so
strong,
kept your steady gaze for
what seemed years,
until the tears
stopped and dried.
Dumbfounded by
this
sheer kindness, I rested
halfway between that pasture where
you had found me and the hilltop destination where
each morning pink would break and you would
spread your arms out,
palms held open,
proudly show me valley below,
as if this moment was brand new.
We would
then descend,
aurora's colored clouds
completely lost on
me and, too, the height, the why
of this recurrent
tour,
the
space beneath
the peak and the return by stars.
But that
night you touched my face,
and
I slept,
I had visions of yours
and then knew
I had seen it before.
So, as the moon hung low
and shining, I woke revived,
anticipating
arrival and
with purpose,
tried
to match your stride.
This time,
atop the hill, the lights mixing, creating prismatic display of dale,
I understood.
We held
hands
and looked up at the
great sun rising,
flooding the sky in fire,
and in that instant,
I knew
what I had missed each time before.
The grain
stood out
with dignity,
waving,
so far down, glowing now golden
where before, it had seemed drab
and merely brown,
the meadow,
malachite and now flowering with promise,
the small rivers, coursed with force.
I realized it was all yours
and you were giving it to
me.
The evening excursions the necessary means by which to grant this
gift,
for now I saw the others.
Waiting.
I,
now,
would guide.
The Sunday Whirl
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Carries On
By, Jove, quips God, What
went wrong
here?
He
slogs through our muddy mess,
scratches His head.
Shrugs.
Wonders,
Why did I promise not to
flood this place again?
Makes
mental note to be careful with those
covenants.
Dust, he mutters, now shakes His head. Snorts.
It would
be funny if it
wasn't so damn sad. He kneels,
pounds His fist into the dirt,
and the
earth quakes.
Humans
hardly tremble.
Calming, He sifts
through
the
sand beneath Him, soiling His
fingers with our remains,
pondering
what might have
happened had
he
added
an eighth day, a
ninth day, a
tenth.
But He's always had a thing for
sevens.
He calls down the
angels
to console Him.
They hover round with
reassuring whisperings,
reminders gently spoken
of
the why.
They praise creation. He smiles wistfully
as they list reasons of why,
still,
it
is
good.
God is swayed,
stands invisible upon orbiting sphere, begins
to move in rhythmic dance with heavenly host.
Slowly,
at first,
then
faster,
all ethereal bodies tapping
feet and waving wings and
arms.
The
trees catch on and join in,
limbs
leaping,
leaves swinging, and then
the waters too, rippling and
laughing in cascades and currents, dispelling
myth of disinterested deity
distant
in the sky.
We name the action, 'storm,'
sleep even sounder with no inkling of the minds of mountains
bending,
the
rocks reacting
in refrain.
We are a pragmatic people to our core,
ignorant of the vibes of glory just outside
our door.
We,
who lag so far behind the simpler
beings,
the crux of all His hope,
and somehow blissfully
unaware.
When morning mist
gently wakes, we deck ourselves in plumes
of
practical endeavors,
busy ourselves with our own
importance.
Pass out blame, take all
credit,
employ herculean efforts to
run the show
and live in secret desperation until our deaths.
And God
stands on the precipice of
the impulse of
annihilation,
thinking,
Maybe this
is mercy,
then catches sight
of just one ragamuffin mite,
watches
with interest his silly antics .
Somehow, this creature softens
the father's heart of
God,
and so He caves.
He gathers the angels for a huddle,
sighs,
and when He
speaks,
the wind whirls, emitting secrets infinite and
the world carries on.
The Sunday Whirl
went wrong
here?
He
slogs through our muddy mess,
scratches His head.
Shrugs.
Wonders,
Why did I promise not to
flood this place again?
Makes
mental note to be careful with those
covenants.
Dust, he mutters, now shakes His head. Snorts.
It would
be funny if it
wasn't so damn sad. He kneels,
pounds His fist into the dirt,
and the
earth quakes.
Humans
hardly tremble.
Calming, He sifts
through
the
sand beneath Him, soiling His
fingers with our remains,
pondering
what might have
happened had
he
added
an eighth day, a
ninth day, a
tenth.
But He's always had a thing for
sevens.
He calls down the
angels
to console Him.
They hover round with
reassuring whisperings,
reminders gently spoken
of
the why.
They praise creation. He smiles wistfully
as they list reasons of why,
still,
it
is
good.
God is swayed,
stands invisible upon orbiting sphere, begins
to move in rhythmic dance with heavenly host.
Slowly,
at first,
then
faster,
all ethereal bodies tapping
feet and waving wings and
arms.
The
trees catch on and join in,
limbs
leaping,
leaves swinging, and then
the waters too, rippling and
laughing in cascades and currents, dispelling
myth of disinterested deity
distant
in the sky.
We name the action, 'storm,'
sleep even sounder with no inkling of the minds of mountains
bending,
the
rocks reacting
in refrain.
We are a pragmatic people to our core,
ignorant of the vibes of glory just outside
our door.
We,
who lag so far behind the simpler
beings,
the crux of all His hope,
and somehow blissfully
unaware.
When morning mist
gently wakes, we deck ourselves in plumes
of
practical endeavors,
busy ourselves with our own
importance.
Pass out blame, take all
credit,
employ herculean efforts to
run the show
and live in secret desperation until our deaths.
And God
stands on the precipice of
the impulse of
annihilation,
thinking,
Maybe this
is mercy,
then catches sight
of just one ragamuffin mite,
watches
with interest his silly antics .
Somehow, this creature softens
the father's heart of
God,
and so He caves.
He gathers the angels for a huddle,
sighs,
and when He
speaks,
the wind whirls, emitting secrets infinite and
the world carries on.
The Sunday Whirl
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