Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Dog

When lonely, his whimper
sparks across the dark
gap where the heartbeat's born
like a wolf howling
a bridge of sorrow
to the moon.

Once I left him too long.
He dug a hole so deep
it became a throat
that swallowed night.
I climbed down to get him out,
saw stars shining overhead
at noon.

If I forget to feed him,
he nibbles 
crumbs from my childhood,
that place swept
and left  long ago.

When I dream
he runs, leash-free,
returns to lick my hand.
One night
I will follow him
to the river,
step into a weathered boat
floating on the cold fire
of captured stars,
then walk with him
into his world.


© Jean Sampson, 2015


Canis Major among the Myth Constellations
from the Universe Today website



Monday, August 17, 2015

Your Short Leaving (for Nelson Mandela)

You are in our hearts and our souls;
our thoughts fill with only your being.
We dance not for dying on this one day,
But we sing in joy of your short leaving.

For we are here to keep your name alive
in words that tell of you as saint to none,
who was of this world when in sorer want
and saw new from the old under the sun.

We sing and dance in joy for your going;
our thoughts fill with only your being.
You are in our hearts and our souls;
We will long keep you in your short leaving.


© Dennis Wright, 2015

Nelson Mandela in Johannesburg, May 2008
South Africa, The Good News
from Wikimedia Commons



Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Boy Who Waits

His smile opens over a missing 
front tooth. Perhaps he’s eight, 
maybe nine. A gray wool cap 
hangs on his forehead, jacket 
buttoned, black.  He perches on 
the end of a planked bench and 
waits as instructed.  He holds 
his hand on a plaid red blanket 
draped across the bench -- is it 
his mother’s fringed shawl -- maybe, 
it is worn, it is dear.  He looks straight 
at Chagall as if posing one century 
ago in Paris, or was it Vitebsk?  
Morning sunrays warm the walls, the 
floor of a room that seems cozy, 
except the doors that are padlocked 
and the barren space -- lock, bench, 
cupboard, a dustpan, rose-colored jug 
stored high, out of his reach.  

Scarce color in this painting, the boy’s 
feet are on the floor.  No magic cows or 
smiling horse, no lovers float above. 

This was what the artist painted, nothing 
more about the boy.  Imagine him painted 
now -- would the lock be gone, the title new?

or would nothing change -- the boy sitting
idle, waiting as told, faint hues of 
red and rose -- still the village idiot.


© Marti Snell, 2015

The Village Idiot

Painting: “The Village Idiot” by Marc Chagall (1914-15)
Painted in Paris but likely an image from his home near Vitebsk, Belarus - part of the Russian Empire. Oil and graphite on paper (49.5 x 37.8 cm). In the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Monday, August 3, 2015

Sunset

Is so much more than gold-lit treetops above the pines.
Like an arresting figure drawing near, I’m hesitant to describe, 
sundown absorbs all the likely adjectives in its saturated demise.
There is light, though not the “bright white” of those curly electric bulbs,  
a dull, diffuse, dusty light found where surplus objects are sold.
There’s that pink in the sky remarked by parents’ sighs on the 
evening of another day.
There’s the still blue sky, house hues darkening on the rise,
the kind of light felt in dreams without color or warmth,
a wholly other substance, the view beyond the frame.
There’s the light left in the living room, the reflected light on the chair,
on the slats and the edge of the leather seat while other objects disappear. 
There are layers of darkening trees, a searing ribbon of gold sky,
a purpling of indigo and pink and stunning aqua to the east.
I move through darkening rooms to catch the light’s distant fire, 
as a witness to a burning savannah, in a country never traveled. 
Still there is the light, a fire’s embers burning,
a smoky grey surrounds what’s left, the baby blue has died, 
the aqua’s gone, all features dimmed, a trace remains of proof of day 
when streetlamp lights my window.

© Mary E. Burns, 2015

Riebeis, Austria ~ evening
Photo by Stefan Mayrhofer
from Wikimedia Commons