Friday, October 31, 2014

Rothko

On waking:
Dream still fertile,
Two planes in one
Endless landscape,
Colors of soil and moss
And that is all. 
Do I have the right
To tell another to live?
The waiting eternal
Comforts us.
I believe this.
Defining, I look out
At ancient,
Sanctified ground,
Where beyond, in grey daylight,
Blue jays flit,
Bolts primary
Against russet-red maple,
Jeweled green-dressed trees
Yet to change
Behind the red
Barn roofs below,
Season's decay golden
In the garden,
The aboriginal dying
Returned to
Soil, moss.

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Season


Autumn winds
Don't know quite how 
They want
To blow, and actually 
They don't 
Blow as much as
Start and stop, trying
To ascertain the 
Velocity
Of the season oncoming,
But of course no one really
Knows in these strange
Times, and anyway 

Even if we listen to these
Winds, we can't figure out 
If they are hammer, howl, 
Pass-on-through or 
Float back into
The gentle of the snow
Soon to come,

The question is 
Just when 
And truth is now
That no one knows. 

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Good Night from South Bend

            September 23

Across morning's early fall fields
Where summer-sleek cattle
Fold themselves down onto
The turning earth

Sea gulls swoop under
Lowering grey clouds
Full of waiting rain

In the distance I see
The Amish farmer, clad in
Black work clothes,
His straw hat near-gold in
An unexpected shaft of sunlight

That disappears back into
The vast roil of nimbus as
Quickly as he does,
Ducking into his barn,
Shouldering harness

Ephemera, all of it,
Passing whole in my
Sidelong glance,

Wending west, going home.

Coming Home


           
            For Aunt Gretchen

Behind the old dream,
Arriving autumn sun drops early
Behind maples and the orange Octobers.
Driving home from town,
The halo lingers, sun slanting in behind
The western ridges, and
Across the road into the village.
The canopy is up-lit gold,
Branches bending across
The two lanes, like
A trip into the fairy world.

Far away old longings waft,
Slight breezes in the
Change of seasons, and
The homeostasis settles.
Not that it is the right or happy
Place, but it
Is the known, and

Breathing deep and quiet
In the pulsing night
The what might have been
And what might be
Is as alive
As anything, is
Not confined to
Any present, and enduring.
I hum an indistinct tune,
Recalling what she said to me
As I departed home, for home:

Listen to yourself, she said.
I search for sleep, filing 
Tomorrow’s tasks, and weary; and
Suddenly it all
Makes perfect sense.