“Nature and books belong to the eyes that see them.”
–Emerson
Full Disclosure
Is it wrong to be in love
with the Frost that lies
in the ground of Vermont
all year round?
It doesn't really bother me
that frost has a way
of sneaking in ‘round here
without warning,
or – despite modern delays -
this time the leaf-transition
seems earlier than before.
I'm thoroughly impressed
with Thoreau’s pious awe,
and how every night
manages to morph into morning.
I'm not afraid to confess
an obsession with asters,
all fearless, purple, and wild,
as tiny threads of milkweed
chase monarchs in full flight.
But I'll admit
neither guilt nor shame
to any “No Trespassing” sign
I've ignored.
The thing of it is, in this poem as in every one of yours I recall, that the virtuosity goes hand in hand with the sheer (sometimes mischievous) pleasure you get in the writing of these - but isn't writing, poetry in particular, supposed to be grim, starchy, the product of or exercised with pain?
.... absolutely, much like the gut wrenching Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock!but isn't writing, poetry in particular, supposed to be grim, starchy, the product of or exercised with pain?
_______________________
I'm not sure if I've ever said it before AuntShecky but, I love the way your poems tickle all the senses!![]()
Last edited by ~Sophia~; 09-26-2009 at 03:58 PM.
Thank you, Prince and Sophia. I have to think about your comments. The speaker of a poem and its author aren't always the same person, and that as a writer (or would-be writer) I would like my role to follow what T.S. Eliot said in "Tradition and Individual Talent," if it isn't presumptous of me to mention his illustrious name in the same sentence as myself. That's all I'm going to say for now.
I couldn't agree more AuntShecky! I was just pulling PM's leg. And it isn't presumptuous of you at all mention your name with his. I think TSE would be very okay with it!
Faithful Failures
Who invited them? They crashed my life!
Each time I turn around,
they're right there – mugging,
shoulders scrunched, palms upward,
heads tilted with a simpering look
as if to say, “Eh, what're ya gonna do?”
I can't even take a perfectly innocent
stroll down the line
without their tracing my every step.
It’s as if every little stray pup
in the world who ever followed a 4th grader home
suddenly morphed
into a ravenous pack of Hell-hounds.
No, we can't keep them.
Well, I was already worn out,
and they were never welcome.
Now it’s way, way, way past
three days – no fish in all the waters
of the earth ever stunk as much
as these, who pitch
their moldy tents at the foot
of my bed, and hog the night. They cop
the eggs of freshly-laid plans
and crack ‘em, one by one.
Above the rim
of a shaky cup
I see them,
diving into the day
with their know-it-all smirk.
Last edited by AuntShecky; 11-02-2009 at 07:00 PM.
Another great one, Faithful Failures, Auntie! I love these humorous laments.
I especially love the pups and tents.
Faithfully Successful!
By the way, did you mean "heads tilted" instead of "heads titled" in S1?
this gets better and better. what did the 'past three days' mean? the image of the hell hounds chasing a person is funny.
There were so many stellar entries in the Autumn Poetry Contest, I didn't vote on the one submitted by yours truly, but here 'tis --a variation on the sonnet, 12 instead of 14 lines and instead of iambic pentameter, iambic hexameter (clumsily rendered, perhaps):
“Does a leaf get lonely when it watches its neighbors fall?” –John Muir (Quoted in Our National Parks: America’s Best Idea)
Anthropomorphism in Autumn
Can winter’s omens shake slim aspens with cold fears?
Would mountain peaks yearn to suckle an infant in the sky?
Do geese compare this trip to those of other years?
Are airborne tufts of milkweed aware of where they'll fly?
Would fading flowers cause the meadow’s heart to ache?
Does a maple ever dream of a future April bed?
Might the October moon want to get a rake
to whisk occluding clouds away from its clearer head?
Do nettles itch to snag crisp days on bristled burrs?
Could wildlife somehow imagine a poorer patch,
to contemplate nature’s bliss and brutal spurs,
while wretchedly singular, from the universe detached?
Last edited by AuntShecky; 11-02-2009 at 09:04 PM.
Oh that is such a good poem Aunty. I almost voted for it too. There were lots of good ones to choose from. I must admit the title threw me, but the poem was extremely engaging. That last stanza was excellent.
Do nettles itch to snag crisp days on bristled burrs?
Could wildlife somehow imagine a poorer patch,
to contemplate nature’s bliss and brutal spurs,
while wretchedly singular, from the universe detached?
LET THERE BE LIGHT
"Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena
My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/
*loved it! maybe personalize the wildlife with an individual, is a minor suggestion. wow... i love the aspens shaking and the moon raking(rhyme). goto *