Friday, 19 December 2025

Five Poems by William Doreski

 






Reproaching Ourselves 

 

Reproaching ourselves in mirrors 

doubles the pain and regret 

but also flatters parts of us 

we hadn’t noticed or considered. 

 

The day splits along fault lines 

that like our bodies follow templates 

patterned millions of years ago 

before we ever thought we’d evolve. 

 

Sun leaks into cracks and crevices 

to expel the dark that pooled 

overnight. Our hearts work hard, 

suctioning up dead sentiments 

 

to bag in plastic and deliver 

to the big dumpster at the landfill. 

We reproach ourselves for believing 

that our generation was riper 

 

and more literate than those before. 

The gray figures of the past look 

over our shoulders and see themselves 

mirrored as we imagine them, 

 

not as they understood themselves. 

The pain of being ourselves alone 

and the regret for lost affection 

thicken as we gaze through our age. 

 

Yet our dimmed sight still blazes 

with memories of falling stars 

and dawns pink enough to rouse us 

from nightmares we gladly indulged.

  

 

When We Talk Politics Aloud 

 

The gilded streets we evoke 

when we talk politics aloud 

resist mapping, resist public 

transit, refuse dirty, ragged, 

and frankly elemental people. 

 

We would rather not walk these streets 

but to get beyond the river, 

beyond the abandoned factories, 

past the haunted cathedral, 

we must accept the phony glare, 

 

tint our eyesight to adapt, 

taint our minds to ignore 

the falsity of cheap gold paint 

spilled by careless acts of the mind. 

We rarely argue but mainly declaim 

 

in earth tones that shouldn’t offend. 

Yet when we attain a certain pitch 

the streets gild over and wink 

in the dense, reconstituted light. 

Our few friends blame us deeply 

 

for inciting such blunt awareness. 

but we never mean anyone harm. 

Just talk between the two of us, 

a commodity free of tariffs, 

possibly so cheap it offends. 

 

 

The Village Aesthetic 

 

Our local artists look from 

windows and paint what they see. 

But their canvases sprout demons 

and monsters and sassy gnomes. 

Does paint stick more firmly 

to these faunae than to gardens  

with rabbits and deer browsing? 

Does a portrait of Frankenstein’s 

latest nightmare cohere while 

one of a feathery young woman 

peels from the fabric and puddles 

at the feet of the desperate painter? 

 

I ought to ask if being an artist 

unleashes the godless fantasies 

I barely contain as I wander 

through the village and peer 

through art supply shop windows. 

A wooden mannequin intended 

for amateurs to learn anatomy 

dances and waves its arms at me. 

A package of tubed watercolors  

bleeds a mush of brownish sludge. 

 

I’ll never understand why oil 

on fabric or watercolor smeared 

on paper taunts us so cruelly, 

but the makings of the greatest art 

are those of the rankest beginner 

and make aesthetic room for creatures 

and distorted landscapes no one 

as timid as me should inhabit. 

 

 

 

The Antitheses 

 

My windows frame the landscape 

in average colors and timid forms. 

But one window overlooks  

 

Paris, Rome, Moscow, Berlin. 

I lean on the sill and listen 

to French, Italian, German, Russian, 

 

and learn how expressive people 

become when framed in landscapes 

as detailed as Brueghel and Bosch. 

 

I’m glad I had this window installed. 

The others open onto brown places 

barely touched by April blossoms. 

 

can’t afford to install views west 

to Shanghai, Tokyo, Singapore, 

but maybe some foundation 

 

would honor me with a stipend 

to visit those living cities and slump 

in cafés where local intellects bloom. 

 

Better to stay home and count tulips 

with their shocking braggadocio. 

Cheaper to brew my own coffee 

 

while the beans still ripen in Kenya 

and Sumatra, tariffs be damned. 

Maybe I’ll play with antitheses 

 

like hot /cold, rain/ shine, glad / sad 

and pretend this is the poetry 

for which the naked world has pined. 

 

 

Iridescence of Spring 

 

The faint iridescence of spring 

manifests in sangria, crocus, 

and pink hellebore perking 

and spilling petals in the rain. 

 

Goodbye to the past, thunder says, 

the texture of landscape perfected. 

Goodbye to useless intellect, 

the dramaturge of wind insists. 

 

I’m unpersuaded. The storms 

get carried away, shedding wind 

too strong for scrawny hardwoods, 

a bombast of hail following. 

 

This is the daily commonplace, 

the crackle and snap of power 

exercised merely to shock us. 

Sooner or later the crimes expose 

 

our weak spots, bruising deeply 

as trees fall in the ashen gusts. 

Then we’ll emerge from ourselves 

with the look of startled groundhogs. 

 

Then we’ll regret the iridescence 

in which we’ve invested our credit. 

The juvenile moments of spring 

flatter those who flatter themselves, 

 

but people as shapeless as us 

bow to the wind and accept 

the cut and thrust of lightning 

as our last plausible alibi.







 

Five Poems by William Doreski

  Reproaching Ourselves     Reproaching ourselves in mirrors   doubles the pain and regret   but also flatters parts of us   we   hadn’t  no...