Showing posts with label poems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poems. Show all posts

Thursday, May 10, 2018

At Dark-Thirty




I.

Driving at moondown
Along a fog-bound country road
Into blue first light
And early morning time,

I watch as dawn gathers,
Spins gauzy forms
and misty webs
From forgotten wisps of night.

Ghost trees float like clouds
Over frost-paled pastures;
In the dawning light
A gray mule
Might be a unicorn.

From the dark-gabled farmhouses
Yellow windows
Shine like homing beacons
In the lingering night.

Behind them I imagine
Warmth, homely sounds and smells
Embraced within that light
And a family's morning murmur.


II.

Of course he beat her. . . everybody knew.

Riding in to the early shift,
Yawning in the black dark before true morning,
I'd look over at her house
Like always . . . you know the way you do . . .

See the light on in the kitchen
And know she was there alone,
Drinking cup after cup of that bitter coffee,
Smoking her breakfast,
And likely nursing a new bruise or two.



III.

Their lights were always on by five.
She'd get the cook stove going 
And behind the thin curtains I'd see
The two of them, moving through their morning dance.
He fixed coffee; she made biscuits and eggs.
The radio, always set to the local Christian station,
Blared the good news of another day --
Weather, lost hunting dogs, cattle and trucks for sale.
He'd linger for that second cup,
Waiting till yesterday's hog prices were told.
Then, heaving himself up from the table,
He'd take his cane and tap his way to the sink,
Rinse his teeth and settle them back in place,
Ready to meet the day.







Friday, December 12, 2008

After the Rain

Thursday was another day of blessed, soaking rain, pattering on the metal roof and bringing healing relief to our long-parched fields and woods.

At last, in late afternoon, the clouds began to roll away to the east where the setting sun tinted them with pink and rose and gold.



And then a moonrise -- just two days shy of full.

So much beauty.



No oil to read by . . .
I am off to bed
But ah! . . .
My moonlit pillow

An appropriate haiku by Basho (1644 - 1694), probably the greatest of haiku writers.

Go here for Kay Byer's lovely poem "Full Moon."
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