Monday, October 24, 2011

The Other Side


All week the threshing machine spat straw.
And then there it sat, a great yellow dome
begging to be climbed if you could do it.
I couldn’t.  Nobody could, not a straw pile -
a running start and a loud whoop gained you
a few feet but not the summit, ever.
It was the pigs, rubbing and burrowing
around the edges, who started the other game.
They’d thrust their shoulders against the stack,
then root and trench their way around the base.
Before long they had undercut the edge
and turned their crooked paths toward the center,
rambling pig-sized tunnels just right for a boy
on his knees, and there I was, crawling around
beneath who knows how many tons of straw
held up by pillars any runt could knock down.
Breathe deeply and ease in, grope your way along.
Follow the shoat trotting through the dark -
he grunts in fear of you, not of the path.
Hold your breath against the rot and something
that’s cramping your heart.  Let the shoulders glide
gently, so gently, along the walls.  Let it doze,
let it dream of quiet days in the sun
when a wren could light unnoticed.  Let it sleep
like a child till you reach the other side
and daylight: stained knees, manure up to your wrists,
but you’re out now, and no column fell.
And if it had, that great stack would have made no sound–
oh, a little sigh, perhaps, as it listed
a few degrees, exhaled a wisp or two,
and snuggled around me its gentle bulk.
© David Black, 2011

Haystack at Giverny, by Monet

Monday, October 17, 2011

Stained Glass

Washed in light, yet stained to screen
The light within, without.
I pray the Lord will wash me clean
Thru' death & darkest doubt.
I traced His love in a rainbow's curve;
I find it when I search.
I feel it when I'm made to serve,
A window to the church.
          © F. Carroll Harrison, 2011

Window, Canterbury Cathedral

Monday, October 3, 2011

What Will It Take

WHAT will it take...
For the world to know Itself as One?
Defiance of Unity?
Allegiance to Autonomy?
Separation as an Entity?
Confusion a Reality?
War as Eventuality?
STOP IT! Just Stop.
In terms of Being 
We are One in Spirit and Humanity
Environment lives and breathes
We aspire...
Let us be open to a vision
of differences proclaimed, 
as every flower we know
has got a name,
yet no inherent cause to blame another species grown beside.
Let us awake to a truth inside....
We are ONE
Yet, even in Nature's way 
we see that conflict lives....
The forest overtakes the field 
as saplings sprout amidst 
the grass which came to be 
after a fire which leveled all there was to see....
How do we manage our Destiny?
Seeking the Light that we all require, let's not mob the place.
Every flower needs some space 
to live and grow!
Understanding this is So, and giving each their Due, 
Unity will follow through.
© Gerry Sackett, 2011

Touch-me-not; photo by Tony Russell

Monday, September 26, 2011

After the Storm

We waited for the late afternoon downpour
to turn to mist, 
when the front garden smelled 
of old worms, new earth.  
I stepped in the wet; 
it took my footprints 
with submission.   
The weeds had taken over the yellow
in the Yarrow, the patience in the Impatiens, 
and the blooms of begonia were beaten purple 
in the falling dark.
I handed you a claw to grab brown tangle 
that braided beneath Black Eyed Susans and Sedum,
Dianthus and Daylilies.
You tugged, arms outstretched, 
sweat rose over your lip like a first mustache, 
or the blister ballooning on the side of your finger.   
Quietly, dusk gathered under the umbrella 
of the Japanese maple.
We pulled the last interloper and headed to drink 
the run of cold water
from a hose coiled aimlessly 
in the side yard. 
© Susan Muse, 2011

Dianthus barbatus; photo by AutoGyro at Wikimedia Commons

Monday, September 19, 2011

To a Young Girl (Inspired by Maureen)

I remember you…
The first time you learned to skate.
And when you skied your first slope,
I remember your determination.

Then when spring came
You raced home from school
To do your homework in a tree.
I see you on the highest branch.

In dresses, jeans and silver heels,
You become a mixed collage,
And when summer flowers return,
I remember each variety as I
    remember you.

© Shelly Sitzer, 2011

Photo of Shell's painting of her daughter Maureen

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Too-Tight Pants

My pants are tight, much too tight,
And I can't imagine why. 
They dig in my waist, pull at the seams,
And they hurt across the thigh. 
They fit so tight around the legs,
I can't even bend my knees. 
They're short in length and in the stride,
And I hope I won't have to sneeze. 
I don't quite know what I shall do
If I have the urge to cough. 
I'm sure that all my seams will split,
And my pants will fall right off. 
They're far too tight around the back,
And the zipper will not zip. 
I'm having trouble breathing, too,
If I bend down from my hip. 
I can't help wondering just why
These pants are so very tight. 
  Surely a person cannot grow 
Too big for their pants overnight! 
  I notice my little brother 
Is looking downcast and grim. 
  It seems that he has problems, too. 
His pants are too big for him. 
© Joyce Broughton, 1990


Too-tight pants; photo by lengtarang on Photobucket

Monday, August 29, 2011

Harvest

In winter,
when the sun is a dandelion
seeded with ice,
all I can give you of summer
is this fading red, yellow, orange
the fall tree released.

If I offer you
this harvest of light
gleaned from long days
with firefly twilights,
will you lift your hands
 into the sky,
two birds singing
songs of praise?
© Jean Sampson, 2011

Fallen leaves; photo by Tony Russell