Showing posts with label shape poem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shape poem. Show all posts

Sunday, February 6, 2022

Axe, Maul And Wedge

 

 




Axe, Maul And Wedge

 
When you first brought me to the farm, you taught me how to
turn wood into fire. 'To part firewood fiber from fiber, to
 make it small,' you'd say,'you think you need an axe. 
An axe is sharp and  showy; an axe has blade
and bite and swings like the
pendulum of god, but
 
 what you really need to split the wood is a wedge.'You
smiled your wisdom-imparting smile, 'after all a
wedge was the first machine.' Where the
axe falters, beaten, the maul with blow
 after blow pushes the wedge deep
between the weave of atoms
til wood breaks,
 
 forced away from itself, no longer looking like anything
that was once alive, dryads' home, birds' harbor,
just kindling meat. And then is the time for
the axe, flying abrupt and wild as
 a silver moon of cyclone through
 the dry strings of bark and
 heartwood.
 
And when it came time for the
 splitting of us, you might say
you were the maul, she
was the wedge and I
the gaudy axe
 
attacking the last
tough fragments
of what we
 were
 
to provide for
the next
 fire.
 
 
 
February 2022
 
 










posted for
















Images: Wedge, by user Shakespeare, public domain via wikimedai commons Fair Use
Photo of axe via Sunday Muse Fair Use


Thursday, June 11, 2015

Cave Light



Cave Light




Darkness is safety
when the eye won't shut;
what can be seen
in the dark warm
where pillars of salt
turn ebony and
 the far sound 
of ocean licks
at time's feet?
Without fail
 I see two
you
myself
the 
twisting meet 
of  stalactite 
and 
stalagmite;
the fallen
also raising
a bridge from 
dissolution,
conduit and 
collapse 
columned, fused, 
shadows in the light 
at cave-mouth that sends us
its  own soft arms as we span
the rock room and shelter night.




~June 2015













posted for     real toads









Challenge: Caverns of Thoughts

Corey Rowley (herotomost, at Mexican Radio, and  recently published author of On Hunter's Wash ) takes us spelunking in the caverns of the mind, our quest to report back on what we see. This was a quick and spontaneous write, so thanks, Corey, and all my patient readers for putting up with whatever happens when there is not the usual excruciating editing process.















Images: Cave Dwellings Near Sperlinga Sicily, 1933, by M.C. Escher
Magic Grotto, 1942  by Remedios Varo
Fair use via wikiart.org




Monday, April 20, 2015

The Leaf Lover






"...And pluck till time and times are done
The silver apples of the moon,
The golden apples of the sun."
~from The Song of Wandering Aengus, by W.B. Yeats

~*~


The Leaf Lover




Amber, cinder,
buckwheat, silver;
wind-back barque, jade-veined sail,
cloud my trail; songbird table
blackbird's cradle;
south wind bides where sparrow hides
and none can follow. My arms are roads
for squirrel and swallow.
My toes are curled
in earthen codes.
 Love me, love,
in drape and dapple
in darkness or in sun's accord.
Love  me, love;  
I'll show you apples
no one has ever
 seen 
before.




~April 2015








posted for 

I, Tree
Summon the green within, and write a poem from the point of view of a sentient tree who gets to address his or her keeper.

Slightly late to the party, as usual...








Images: Pattern of Leaves,  by Georgia O'Keefe
Fair Use via wikiart.org
Footer Image: via internet, title and author unknown
No copyright infringement intended. Will remove on request.

Sunday, January 18, 2015

The Hourlass Of Crowded Demons


The Hourglass Of Crowded Demons








With every
grain that pits my sleep 
a demon falls, sliding past 
his subatomic twins
down the chute 
of  another
narrowing night
to rattle in a pail of dreams
that rouse themselves and shake,
wet cerberi of dullness or desire
carrying each his bleached 
memory-bone to the fire.




~January 2015














posted for      real toads


Kerry's Weekend Mini-Challenge: Word Substitution

Kerry O'Connor (Skylover, Skwriting ) once again picks two titles in her mental shellgame of word substitution, asking us to make something appear where least expected. (In the spirit of the mini-challenge, I have made this one quite mini.)

Apology: I just realized as I was tweaking this I changed the original title which was The Hourglass of Dreaming Demons--sorry Kerry. I did keep the dreaming part, tho.







Images: Top: The Hourglass Nebula, (" MyCn18, a young planetary nebula located about 8,000 light-years away, taken with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) aboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST).) by Raghvendra Sahai and John Trauger (JPL), the WFPC2 science team, and NASA/ESA" ) Source
Bottom: Skull Hourglass, by Brynhilder on deviantArt, shared under a Creative Commons License.


Thursday, December 12, 2013

Evergreen


Evergreen



For
Christmas
one  year my
grandmother  got  a
small poinsettia, feet wrapped
in green foil, top red as the blood
 on the split palms of Jesus over her bed,
a scarlet  exotic swaying its  tropical  hips,
taller each winter, bloomlessly braced on a broken
hula-hoop, reborn evergreen; in her house, like Christmas,
things always
lived..




~December 2013



55 red, green and blue memories for     the g-man






Process notes: photo is of my Swedish grandparents, Clara and Ragner, on one of their sixty-odd wedding anniversaries.( I'm guessing year 30 here.) My grandmother's dress was river blue with grey-blue, pale green, and white paisleys, very filmy, and my grandfather's tie, his favorite, was dark blue and loud with a gold/deep green leaf design. The poinsettia was literally both an exotic and an extravagance back then--I believe it was a gift from one of my uncles--and it did end up, rather emaciated but huge ,staked  on an old red hula-hoop in a giant pot, where it grew like a vine and was alive the last time I saw her, Christmas 1976,





Photo (c) joyannjones. All rights reserved.