A Garden
Azaleas burst forth in a mantle of soft pink,
Enjoying their brief reign in the springtime sun.
But the winds will steal their blossoms,
Leaving no trace that they were ever more than green.
The tulips, once a sea of swaying colour,
Have shed their vibrant hues,
They stand now disrobed and withering,
Their scattered petals littering the lawn.
The roses have quietly prepared their entrance:
Leaves, then buds, emerge from woody stalks.
All at once the garden bursts with colour:
The pink and white tea roses nestle between the brilliant
reds
At the feet of the sand cherry trees.
Their purple leaves cradle soft pink flowers.
I walk among them, each a profusion of splendour,
Overwhelmed by their beauty.
A POEM IS
A poem is born from those thoughts the mind cannot
contain
That bursts forth, fully formed
Like Athena from the forehead of Zeus
Attired in metaphor, endowed with wisdom.
Poems come into existence violently
Shattering the rib cage like some alien entity
Bloodied, half formed, escaping its confines
To survive in an unfamiliar and critical world
Hungry and determined to be heard
Poems are the sighing hopes
Of dreams deferred, unrealized...
Of raging anger pent up too long
Shouting warnings that echo unheard across the countryside,
Detailing death and destruction, ruin and pain.
Poems are the joyful exhortations from majestic
mountaintops
Of love so deep, soaring and sublime: unrestricted joy and
bliss.
The words pouring forth
A warbling anthem of celebration.
A poem is a sorrow seeded deep within the soul
It grows like a poisonous vine
Squeezing the heart until it nearly bursts,
Seeking solace in tear-drawn images.
When tears have all been spent,
And anguish struggles unrelieved,
Begging words to act as proxy
Courageously charging forward, carrying the banner of
memory
Woven from loss, fringed with the bitterness.
A poem is this and more..
A poem seeks to see the world anew:
To view the ordinary with fresh eyes
Looking back at a landscape,
Listening to lyrical laughter,
Reliving a lazy morning,
Capturing a cartwheeling child,
Remembering a caned chair,
Watching a caterpillar creep across a leaf.
A poem harnesses the world's complexities, its
simplicities.
The sounds of surf chasing sand against the shoreline,
A roaring tornado's wild winds furrowing the fertile fields,
Of crackling fires and ashen logs shifting as they burn,
Of endless stars in endless space, cold and silent.
A poem is the precision of all we measure
The secure simplicity of mathematical formulas
The pristine elegance of a diamond's refracted rainbow
The calculated orbit of a comet crossing the sky.
Poems are all we see and all we know:
the pain and joy, the ugliness and beauty.
A poem is all we imagine and all we dream,
boundless.
A poem is born as each timid soul
Lifts pen in hand and, in fluid strokes, begins to write.
Brother
Brother.
I had one once. Older by two years.
That was a long time ago.
When the world was...what was the world then?
Full of Hopalong Cassidy hope? Flash Gordon adventures?
Ovaltine smiles and Gunsmoke courage?
Dragnet justice and Lassie's loyalty?
They are all gone now. So is he.
It was a long time ago
When age was measured by flipping picture cards
And Little League scores, merit badges on a sash
And lead roles in high school musicals.
His name?
He had one once.
“What's in a name?” the poet asked. His was my father's and
yet his own.
We called him Chip. Off the old block, you know?
Married? For a time.
Here they are, perpetually smiling in photographs
In the time of “We’ve Only Just Begun.”
Karen Carpenter died. Their marriage died before she did.
Then began the nightmare years, decades really.
He was lost in the chaos of the untethered,
In the void of despair, the chasms of doubt,
The abyss of the unreal, the Mind's taunting creation,
Until the end.
I flew to the place he called home, emptied his apartment
And brought him back.
His ashes rest alongside our parents, in a cemetery not far
from here.
He’s with me always, a quiet presence.
Locked in my memories,
Youthful and smiling and full of hope,
Sheltered from his tortured future
At peace, in perpetuity, my older brother.
BOTH YOUR HOUSES
The rhetoric is always the same:
Spewing forth from a face contorted with contempt
Angry and derisive
Voices raised, fingers pointing,
The blame game begins anew.
Another round of hypocrisy and lies,
Slanderous unsubstantiated accusations
Delivered with pretentiousness,
The mantle of righteous indignation squirming uncomfortably
atop their shoulders
Ill-fitting and tattered.
All a puerile catechism
Rendered into sound bites short enough for the simple-minded
To grasp and repeat, bleating the message like the sheep they
are,
Blinded and mesmerized by the fires of hate,
Truth and logic be damned,
They are caught is the sticky web spun by an evil genie
A mirror opposite of reality,
A parallel universe in which foul is fair
Where deflection is the soup du jour
And bigotry is always on the menu
Kathy- these are so poignant. I could see the garden transforming, feel the essence of your poetic words. The poem about Chip touched every fiber of my heart. Both houses - this has sadly become the norm, and you captured it perfectly. I’m thrilled that so many others will have the opportunity to experience your wordcraft.
ReplyDeleteKathy, your artistry with words touches my heart and soul . This is quite a gift you share💝
ReplyDeleteKathy, your artistry with words touches me intellectually, emotionally and spiritually. Thank you for sharing your gifts.
ReplyDeleteThank. You!
DeleteKathy, your artistry with words touches me emotionally, intellectually and spiritually. Thank you for your beautiful gifts.
ReplyDeletePoignant poems. Chip wrenched my heart. Such a touching poem.
ReplyDeleteI almost didn't submit it. Thank you for finding it meaningful
DeleteKathy I love reading your words that always touch my heart. The words you use always pulls me into your vision of what you are conveying. Well done!
ReplyDeleteThank you
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