Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Have the leaves turned yet?

Abandoned sugar camp .






Yes, weekender, the change is under way,

has been since the leaves first spiked,

nature's course is subtle when you're  in it,

each hour something new and never ending,

Everything looks
better in the rain.
each moment of rain

sets free a leaf,

each gust of air

reorders the surface,

and the whirlwind

in the cornfield

is a common wonder.







A Cleansing Rain


Laurel Ridge. Click to expand.

  

A lady rain danced its pavane,

then a warmer evening,

crickets quicker in the jagger patch.


Too easy to think back,

the woods yellowing around me,

scenes of a life pooling with leaves.


In the bruised light of autumn,

with its sweet scent of decay

and the weather degrading,


I wouldn't call it loss,

I'd call it clearing.








—"Lady rain" is what farmers in my family called a light, steady rain.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Waiting for Rain

iPhone 6, click and expand


Waiting for rain,

planting bulbs in brown powder

deeper than we can remember,

raking walnuts from the yard

and wheeling them to the woods

under a river of grackles,

grinnies clucking in the stone rows,

eating dinner under the maple

that's always first to turn,

rocking on the porch at sunset

as a  cricket sings in the aster thatch

and a blood moon rises into the milk of twilight,

waiting for rain.







Friday, September 25, 2015

Empty Farmhouse




A car passes in the half-light,

that's all it takes, the sound of it,

and you are there with me,

your heat and your motion,

with me as the money runs out

and the house falls to ruin,

with me as the yard grows up

with raspberry and ash

and the path to the spring disappears,

with me as elderberry blocks the barn door

and the fields clog with trees.

A dream of desolation

is a dream of forever.









Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Twenty Minutes in Balance

First morning of fall. Please click and expand.


The field at the peak of its flourish,

asters and goldenrod over your head,

in a threnody of bees

spread a blanket on the path,

and be still,

waiting for something to happen—

it happens inside you,

wait twenty minutes,

transcendentalists say,

to enter a dreamscape

of your own projection—

nature never disappoints.








Monday, September 21, 2015

Consolation


I wanted the sky,

that was my ambition,

but i'll take these leaves

crisp in the ditches,

their clatter and smash

loud on a motorless road.





Sunday, September 20, 2015

The Artist Speaks As He Works

"Head of a Woman," Pablo Picasso, 1909
    

I rarely pay much attention

                        to the surface—

A master key to the secrets

                        of my art,


Everything in flux and in question,

What about this, and this, and this?

The ceaseless torment

of five thousand paintings,


Loss, anger, mourning—

Voids the shapes accommodate,

Each generation swept up

In an age of cascading uncertainties,


Consider me, then, dearest shape,

                        your sculptor.








—A found poem, phrases from a New Yorker review by Peter Schjendahl.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Intent

milkweed

  
So i lose myself instead

in the patterns and forms

of the natural world

where lightning and wind

may harm me

and the sun may blister my skin

but it's nothing personal.








Thursday, September 17, 2015

Cadenza

Please click and expand.

  
You are not here now today

and yet i found myself listening

for the melody of your voice

as if i could find it in the asters

sprung from the hilltop where we left you

that black spring we carried you home,

and i heard high up the unexpected wild cry

of a redtail circling under a cloud

when i turned and almost began to answer.









—with a line by Leanne O'Sullivan


Wednesday, September 16, 2015

The Bee Field


   
The field is full of bees,

Full of goldenrod and bees,

Ten acres in the late day sun

Thick with hum and pollen glow,

Futile to pretend I am at peace,

Unhitch my senses from the focused flow,

Ten thousand bees, ten thousand points of song,

And me the only darkness in the solidago.







—after James Wright's "Flowering Olives"


Monday, September 14, 2015

Monarchs



   
Off they go, like children setting sail,

nurtured on the field of your protection;

mostly you let nature take its course.

The best that you could do, it seems,

was to guard the earth.








Saturday, September 12, 2015

Solidago

Please click.

 
Walking through the field

In September is a voyage

Where discovery is not

In seeking new landscapes,

But in seeing with new eyes.







—Proust said that.