Thursday, July 15, 2010

The Pencil Skirt & Other Sketches

Climbing Stairs


This
pencil skirt
is so tight
I have to climb stairs
sideways.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Spring Strains



The first prize for winter's closure
goes to the little chickadee.
Fleeting from tree to branch,
she marks spring’s beginning,
notes the changes of the last season
in her favorite haunts.

There is a hopeful bareness
on the maple tree -
with its numerous bustling buds,
and wet winter trunk,
it will soon swing into a lush greenery
that dazzles the eyes.

Beyond the yard,
the soft and bright sun tickles
the mish-mash earth,
as worms find their way through
a slush of melting snow.

A young boy plies
the waters of the Winooksi
with his fly rod,
anxious to bag
his first spring catch.
A young girl gallops
on a tame black stallion,
round and round
in a sloshy paddock.
Two golfers take
to the sprawling course
after a long in-door winter,
swinging their drivers
about them as they go.

A gardener takes off the hay
from the asparagus:
the harsh February frost is gone -
the fleshy stalk sprouts
through the thawing frost,
and lunges towards air and sun
like a bamboo shoot.

A neighbor halts
through her feverish patch,
bends over and notes
that the seed potatoes
from last year’s harvest
have begun to shoot.

(May, Vemont, 2006)

Duskfall on Coit's Pond


at eight to nine he is alone,
on the part-gravel part-tarred road,
no car ahead, none behind.

from the farm house to home,
it’s about thirty minutes.
make it an hour, he wishes he could,
for there’s much to see
and breathe in
before he sees the bills.

there’s the stirring breeze of dusk,
the death of all the churning
or cutting engines of day:
of chain saws and lawn mowers,
tractors and boat engines,
halley bikes and roaring cars.

the sunlight that penetrates
the clouds and leaves their downsides
with celestial streaks;
that penetrates the canopies,
and taints the leaves of spring
with golden hues;

three canada geese home
at their usual hour,
their hollow calls ebb and circle
above the lake;

the evening birds defend their territory,
each to its perch, with beak assaulting the air
in an endless song;

for him it’s the song
of the tires that turn on the gravel road
that grate the memory;

the hum of the engine,
or the nostalgic strains of jazz
from the car radio
that stirs his mind into a trance-like travel;

the long-forgotten scenes
he would gladly revisit,
the silhouettes of time’s songs,
now but echoes of spaces
once lived.

Vermont, May 2006.

Visitations

On a crisp spring morning
just when you thought the petunias
in the garden looked wonderful
under the dazzling sunlight,
out of the corner,
comes a winged visitor,
whose beauty surpasses
spring’s dainty petals.

She fleets with awkward grace
in untraced highways among the flowers,
lured by momentary dreams
you can only imagine,
now one, then two,
and without warning,
across the dazzling meadows,
twenty-something dainty wings.

The blooming garden rings
out its color bells to them;
tickles their senses of wonderment,
as they fleet like peregrines,
halting here, there,
flapping their wings in haloed beats,
a little sip,
a little smack,
there’s no daintier judge
of the wealth spring brings.

The enchanted meadow calls
and keeps them busy:
the variegated flowers,
the soft and stilling breeze,
and the nectary juice:
if you're looking for wine tasters,
there are none with palates
more tuned.

On a bright rainbow morning,
just when the earth unfolds
nature's shop before your eyes,
here comes august visitors
with neither word or sound,
calling your senses
to a delicate earth.

If you'd taste the best of spring,
you'd not travel
where brochures lead,
but look at the buds in the garden
or the wild flowers along the brook or lake,
or on the hillside out of town.