Showing posts with label coming and going. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coming and going. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

The Briar Maid

 
 
 
 

 
 The Briar Maid
 


When I slip off this
rumpled dress and slide
down the gullet of time;
when I go, and it won't be long
no matter how long;
I want what they take
from the oven to lie
at the tangleroot feet of
the Briar Maid.
 
She is faceless, fierce, ever
green as her puncture-vine cloak
drawing blood at the touch;
though I pull her strangling hands
from oak and hackberry,
with her thorns she circles sanctuary.
Whatever is left that lives knows
she marks the line
past which Time may not go.

She stands guard, 
through cyclone wind,
drought, wildfire and freeze,
for grey squirrels' trees,
for greybrown birds 
fed fat on sunflower, blackberry
acorn and mulberry,for
peanut thieves, my blue bickering jays
and black satin crows;
 
box turtle and
blister-beetle know,
roving armadillo, red-tail hawk, butterfly
in his last piece of sky, prairie
grass and the snakes that swim it,
rat and king, garden, garter
and copper-headed,
each thing secure in its
small life to come and go.
 
 
All that really matters of her
holds safe underground
as will I, ash-soul in place,
faceless, fierce
to feed and to become 
with her in season
ward and warden of that space
that was my land, that was my heart,
that is the last try

for all that's been loved
too hard, too long,
too strong
to die.



October 2022










posted for earthweal's






For those who want to know her better, my original 2013 poem about The Briar Girl is here.


 
 
 
 
 
Photos © joyannjones

Friday, September 23, 2022

The Scarecrow's Sister

 
 
 
 

 
 
The Scarecrow's Sister
(a 55)
 
 
The scarecrow's sister
feels the breath of November
scans the valentine of Winter
sees her brother surrender
his Eden again to Martinmas weather,
mocked in a cornfield
crestfallen with crows.

Tho his overcoat's empty
as her sentimental replay
of Romeo reborn,
she knows Spring will raise him
high on his stick
alive in the corn.








September, 2022






posted for



and



earthweal's 


















Images: In The Fields, Evening  © Jules Breton circa 1900   Public Domain
Pumpkinhead--Self Portrait © Jamie Wyeth, 1972  Fair Use

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Snow Blind

 

 


 

 "If it's peace you find in dying, when dying time is here,
just bundle up my coffin cause it's cold way down there,
I hear that's it's cold way down there, yeah, crazy cold way down there.."
~Laura Nyro, When I Die
 
 
Snow Blind
 
I sit remembering
when we were dragons,
our mating flight in October's
bloodbright sky, 
another country
that rush of scales and fire.
 
Or when you saw me first,
moth with green-eyed wings
on a factory rafter. You knew
 among the nymphs
I was a spriggan

twisted wry but quick and hot,
that on the mountain with the goats
I climbed the highest
to be alone, krampus-girl
too full to eat the darkness.
 
So come, wind of the north.
Blow this west-wind fever from me
with your ice-eyes and cheap bargains.
Mound the cold grey snow
upon this bed, shabby
goblin sheets to numb my sores,
 
rime my lids 
 snow blind, give me
shadow glow, hallucinations, lunatic
visions, his
living face candle-lit,
smiling

at me:
the glass dragon,
the dust-moth dry with
death's-head wings,
broken as easily 
as a candy heart.
 
 

December 2020











 
 
 
posted for Fireblossom
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Spriggan: "a legendary creature from Cornish faery lore...said to be found at old ruins, cairns, and barrows guarding buried treasure. Although small, they were usually considered to be the ghosts of giants..notorious for their unpleasant dispositions...~wikipedia
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Images: photo of Laura Nyro via internet   Fair Use
Moth Wing © Amelia Fletcher    Fair Use
 
 

Friday, May 19, 2017

Milkweed




Milkweed



Open the gates
of your lips and let me
pass, even as
you ripen mine
to that soft splitting
by your tongue.

Trade me your hands
for this furious waste,
breathe thaw on
the frozen plates
that slide and grind
our ties unbound.

Cast each threadbare
husk of garment down
upon the changing earth
so we may turn, turn
from dead to worse
to life again,

popping like milkweed
on the wind, red blood
to white spires, tassels and
catkins of old desires;
asterisks
and afterthoughts,

argonauts, two
fools of wide waters
floating the blue storm
through clouded pillars
over the shoals
of a thousand suns.

~May 2017














 Images: Milkweed, author unknown, fair use via internet
The Argo, by Lorenzo Costa: 1st third of 16th century via wikimedia commons





Monday, May 23, 2016

Goodbye Without An End


Goodbye Without An End








Let me leave where it all begins.
Let me meet you where fires fail.

Let me know you at last as my kin,
where breath is as close as skin,
where we don't know the end of the tale;

where it's better to go than stay
where it's better to dream than wake

tossed on the sparkle and spray
until we dive or break.


~May 2016












My muse seems to be taking a bit of a hiatus, dear readers and friends. As usual, if something comes, I will write it; otherwise I ask you to forgive my absence. Best of summers to you all and as always, thanks for the support over so many years.





Image: Harald Sohlberg, Sea Spray, 1908, pen,ink and watercolor on paper
Fair use.







Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Down On The Coast

Calm Day


Down on the Coast



Three ragged rocks in the bay of the heart
smoothed and seamed by the tailoring spray
now pressed flat as the long wave fades
the water stills, the tide splays
with all its fleery flotsam,
ambergris and driftwood caveats
pulled to deeper decay.

Eleven pouting lemons in a cobalt blue bowl,
secret and sullen as xanthic mollusks,
bitter suns curdling morning to fractions
piercing the tongue with soured satisfactions,
as if to say I told you so
but you just had to 
keep adding sugar.

In the dim gaslight of a half-sincere dream
the medium saw the house burn down, beam
by beam, red walls glow to nothing, saw drawn
in charcoal ectoplasm all the burnt debris--
daguerreotypes of she, of thee
wet framed in blackened ash, 
ruined before time for tea.

Tonight I dream your absinthe aftertaste
gulping loss, coughing up your waste
choking on the acrid gnosis
of each indifferent clumsy phasing
in and out, fractured in either placing,
making and unmaking 
the mask of a sailor's face.

Three rocks in the bay of the heart;
name them as you please or will, so
smoothed and seamed in glinting calm,
blue-ruffled in a bay without a mark;
still mirrors lit by day that in the dark
will founder any cockswain lost at sea
who seeks to come to anchor in that lee.




~May 2012
revised December 2015


Reposted for  real toads
 


Nothing to do with the holidays, just an old wash of words as the pale winter sun enters Capricorn.






Image: I've once again borrowed the work of my friend Petteri Sulonen. Thanks, Petteri, as always for the use of this shot:


Saturday, May 16, 2015

Mudslide


 Mudslide




Your left face
honors your right face
but neither one tells the truth;
neither one
is really here to talk,
while I watch a sky
curdled by spirit swimmers
move closer, watch
their filmy fingers
stroke its crushing weight
into sundered cyclones, kneading
the mud-faced earth.

What strangler
has pulled back the plait
of your hair so
tight across your tangled
white throat? What butcher has
chopped the rich marble
from your cheeks and left
your face so naked and still?
Past and present, you say--
they rain wild in this drench
so an equivocal future
can slide

all the easier
away.

Trussed in cords of your loss,
deaf in drums of your voice,
I knew myself beaten;

but untied--
--O, yes, freed--
I hear too much.

I am my own silence 
floating;
death's latest convert,
looking on numb.



~May 2015











posted for     real toads



Weekend Mini-Challenge: John Donne



Karin Gustafson (ManicdDaily) offers this weekend's challenge, to write to the ringing of chimes, connect the dots of interconnection, or in some other way address Donne's telling lines about how no man is an island. This is what I got, a slap from the past, as it were. Despite the title, the mudslide mentioned is not a physical one.


We have storms heading in again this evening and my computer will be off, so I may be unable to respond or visit till, the weather gods willing, tomorrow.










Image: Sketch of Clouds with Colour Annotations, 1890, by Vincent Van Gogh. 
Public domain via wikiart.org