All
Hallow's Eve
Beeswax candle gutters in the wind
as
drop by drop, long iron links of rain
descend
the porch posts, seeking resurrection,
called
back to natal ocean once again,
sliding
eel-like over grassy plain,
amassing
rivulets across the lawn
and
pooling at the leaf-clogged driveway drain,
plummeting
into dark earth, and gone.
All
Hallow's Eve, and ice will greet the dawn,
footing
treacherous, split garden hoses--
hydrological
phenomenon,
the
way water expands when it is frozen,
the
way that fear grows through each winter's night,
as
souls await their summons to the light.
Hounds
I heard the hounds run late last night,
baying at an auburn moon,
dashing over frosted ridges,
frantic pulling, anxious running
after tracks of gently prancing
cloven hoof prints, spritely
dancing,
dignified and proudly lighting
on the midnight whitened ground.
I heard the hounds run
late last night
loud and clumsy, tumbling,
baying at a distant moon.
March Snowfall (Spring Equinox)
Grey mist over mountain snow.
Grey sky over grey mist.
Crowflight startles a small branch.
White among white cascades.
Wet, erratic dreamlight falls
In dense walls of grey fog
Between trunks of spring-black
trees.
Tracing winter’s last wave
In edges of cold white foam;
Slides under forest floor,
Retreats in black seas of time,
Birth-night of the season.
Beside the late-night burning
hearth,
I dream within the one dark dream,
The white crow-dream of winter’s
end,
Springtime ever-dreams of my kin:
Red
buds swell on thin grey branches,
New
white lambs in a red barn,
Lifeblood
of all born, creation
Stirs
in cups of silver mist.
Frolicking on Beltane morn
following the swaying fronds
deeper into dew-drenched dawn
searching, seeing yet another
farther from friend’s fading
laughter
surrounded by the springtime
silence
alone and merrily, I, singing
saw one tiny footprint, cloven
catching breath to hear the
faintest
rush of leaves along the river–
a whisper of the wind
to hail a glint of golden horn
leaping through unfurling leaves;
life bursting through on Beltane
morn.
Night
Frolic
The children within us
ran rosie rings under the stars
with ashes down we fell and fell
‘till falling was the game,
tumbling arms and heavy stalks
of frost-covered goldenrod.
Blackness under moonless
singing voices circling steaming
breath
We learned each other’s throats and
tongues
and lungs and laughing,
holding hands we saw
the essence of the dark itself
through the towering pines.
Cindy Ellen Hill is a writer,
musician and gardener in Middlebury, Vermont. She has authored two sonnet
chapbooks, Wild Earth (Antrim Press 2021) and Elegy for the
Trees (Kelsay Books 2022). Her poetry has been published in Measure, The
Lyric, Vermont Magazine, PanGaia, Sagewoman, WildEarth, Vermont Life, the
Classical Poets Society, Ancient Paths, and the National Public Radio Themes
and Variations program. She is presently an MFA student at the Vermont College
of Fine Arts.
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