Monday, March 28, 2011
Friday, March 25, 2011
The birth of beauty
Butterflies emerge ~
molten gold
from a sapphire sea.
Creation draws
its breath in wonder.
God smiles.
(Image: In the Butterfly Garden; Laurie Hoffman)
Monday, March 21, 2011
In the end, it's Hopelessness that kills
"And then we came out to see once more the stars." Dante
When we came at last to see the stars
we struggled in vain
to gain hope.
We tried to gaze in wonder,
pride-filled in the proof
that God held our civilization
above all others,
to read into radiance
the nod and wink of
Divine Approval,
acknowledgement of our status
as unique and favored sons.
We struggled to grasp at straws,
to cling to myth and
ancient superstition.
And then the stars began to fall and
we tried tried tried to read the promise
of wishes granted.
But in the end all that was left
was to cower under rocks
and primitive umbrellas,
weeping the dawn
of apocalypse.
Friday, February 4, 2011
Photograph
I saw the end of Antiquity
in the faces of men
lying murdered in the street,
in the failed humanity
of leaders of state,
in fallen museums
and desecrated mosques.
I saw the end in a fallen red kite,
in the laughter of children
now silenced.
The eye is the shutter of discord
whose merest opening
elicits the entrance
in the faces of men
lying murdered in the street,
in the failed humanity
of leaders of state,
in fallen museums
and desecrated mosques.
I saw the end in a fallen red kite,
in the laughter of children
now silenced.
The eye is the shutter of discord
whose merest opening
elicits the entrance
of death.
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Edith
At night she sits by an open window,
waiting for a knock
that she prays will never come.
Footsteps approach, recede,
she covers her heart
remembers to breathe,
but even the shadows
have substance.
This one gone for a soldier
lies garroted in a field of wire;
this one gone for an airman
spun out in a sea of fire---
voices call, no answer
only the emptiness
of air.
(Image: Umberto Boccioni, The Noise of the Street Enters the House, 1911)
At night she sits by an open window,
waiting for a knock
that she prays will never come.
Footsteps approach, recede,
she covers her heart
remembers to breathe,
but even the shadows
have substance.
This one gone for a soldier
lies garroted in a field of wire;
this one gone for an airman
spun out in a sea of fire---
voices call, no answer
only the emptiness
of air.
(Image: Umberto Boccioni, The Noise of the Street Enters the House, 1911)
Monday, October 4, 2010

The Ecclesiast
All that stands eventually falls.
The house my father
built basement to attic
bare-fisted --rough timber
hewn, sanded, nailed --
overtaken in the end
by the obstinance of ivy.
Vanity says the Preacher,
All is vanity.
My father was a fighter
and a giant of a man,
but nature is omnipotent.
(Image: Dave Leiker, Blue Door, http://www.prairiepathways.com/PrairieDust/)
Friday, September 17, 2010

Time folds, a
fallen tapestry
whose layers hold
happy scenes from childhood,
camps pitched on pine green,
the endless blue of cornflowers.
Wheat fields overgrown
become newly mown,
feed kings and shepherds
whose kinship shouts
in the twinkle of an eye
or the unruliness of
an untamed brow.
Courting couples
whose clasped hands
form an unbroken chain
stretching ever into eternity
and all the possibilities held
in an empty universe
and an unformed star.
Image: Marc Chagall, Bride and Groom of the Eiffel Tower, 1938-39
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