Showing posts with label winter poem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter poem. Show all posts

Thursday, January 18, 2024

Our Winter

Mid-January and winter has arrived at last.
The branches droop beneath the snow of two
storms.  No bird has sung for us in weeks.

I have read of winters so cold, so long,
the birds fell like leaves from the trees;
always war is raging nearby or the smoke

of the crematorium has smeared the snow like
a gray, vague and indecipherable rubbing.
No bird in my backyard falls from a branch

that doesn’t catch the air beneath its wings
and swoop off into the wind with a kind of
triumph.  I have never been shot at either.

And yet, not forty miles from here a man
was dismembered and his body parts used
in a ritual with no better purpose than

the resurrection of some long dead devil.
In the next county, a girl of sixteen was
hog-tied and set on fire by two brothers

who confessed she had teased them with her
body.  One brother accused the other
of dancing to the rhythm of her screams.

And so, each day, I watch the birds.  This
morning, a cardinal sat hunched on a limb—
as if I’d mistake him for a bloody fist.

Thursday, January 27, 2022

Eastern Europe, January, 1800, Terzata #31


The coming of the naked year

Is announced by desiccated corn,

Its leaves quivering with fear.


These fields will never be shorn,

New seeds never sown —

Nothing slouches to be born.


We have given all we own

To the bankers and the lords

And secured only blood by loan.


Our shacks are hollow gourds,

No water to drink, only beer.

There’s no strength in hordes.

Bawds lift their skirts and leer.



Note: Terzata is a term of my own invention, a conflation of "terza" as in"terza rima" and "sonata." Other than the varying number of feet per line, the difference from terza rima is that each Terzata ends with a quatrain whose second and fourth rhyme is the same as the poem's beginning rhyme, and is composed of 13 lines (terza rima can be of any length). The first 30 Terzata, written several years ago, can be found here:  30 Terzata


Thursday, February 25, 2021

Winter (Peter Breughel the Younger), Sonnet #552


 








The snow in the back yard rusts like a plucked white rose,

Rutted with the tracks of rabbits and raccoons,

Leaf-pocked and stained with coal ash the wind blows

From factories on the river — a field of runes.


Couples skate, boys race, a man falls through the ice,

Though no one seems to see. Two drunkards play with dice.

The drowned body won’t be found until the spring thaw,

With no consideration of conscience or law.


The air is bitter, unignited by the sun.

The wind stings the cheeks, blinds the eyes, numbs the ears.

It hasn’t been this damned cold in a year of years.

Yet the day is a festival for everyone.


For now, winter distracts women, children and men.

The next snow storm will wipe the world clean again.


My book of the first 200 of these sonnets is now available for purchase. Click here:

Thursday, February 6, 2020

The Gray Tree (Piet Mondrian), Sonnet #497

My book of the first 200 of these sonnets is now available for purchase. Click here:
My Human Disguise.









The ice storm lasted for 36 hours
And coated each tree limb an inch thick.
Workers couldn’t climb collapsing towers
And three hundred thousand clocks ceased to tick.
The trees crumpled beneath the weight and ripped
The power lines from transformers and poles.
Each overloaded circuit breaker tripped.
Without heat we hid in our beds like moles.
Two days later the sun melted the glaze.
Our yards and streets turned pool and rivulet.
The next day a warm wind and hotter blaze
Blew everything dry before the sun set.
The lights came on and normalcy returned.
That spring a million limbs were trimmed and burned.

Thursday, January 17, 2019

Winter (Giuseppe Arcimboldo), Sonnet #440

My book of the first 200 of these sonnets is now available for purchase. Click here:
My Human Disguise.
















I am old and my blood won’t thaw.
I am the end. My lips are mold.
As if I execute some law,
I imprison all with the cold,
The icy and the bitter winds,
Punish spring’s, fall’s, and summer’s sins.
My eyes, nose and cheeks rot and cake.
A few green leaves cling to me still —
My young branches refuse to die.
It’s time to summon the first flake —
My sole star only time can kill —
And then to open up the sky.
When all is buried I will sleep
A tearless world that will not weep.

Thursday, December 13, 2018

January (Grant Wood), Sonnet #435

My book of the first 200 of these sonnets is now available for purchase. Click here:
My Human Disguise.









The storm over, the rabbit’s tracks
Leave ghost faces in sifted snow.
The moon is neither old nor new,
Though enough to light the hayricks.
All white-capped, they lean, row on row,
Bowing at time’s ceremony 
In welcome of the end of now —
The beginning of memory —
Like old men who left October
To youths and welcomed December.
Oh,Tomorrow! Don’t come too soon!
The night has so much dark to live
Before it’s savaged by the sun,
That jealous spoiler high above.