POETRY BRINGS IN THE NEW YEAR

This poem was published in January, 2018 in the Colorado Independent and included in the Columbine Poets of Colorado 40th Anniversary Anthology. It seems particularly relevant to the times in which we find ourselves.

MIRROR WORDS

A new year starts

appearing as a blank slate,

but its history is already written

in the dust of treaties,

land-mine refuse of war,

increased opulence of the rich,

skinny-ribbed orphan’s unheard, “Mama,”

refugee’s grasp for a grain of rice.

All written on a mirror

so we read it backwards

and never quite

understand.

The following poem was published in the Hartford Courant some time in the 1960 or early 1970s, I think. I have improved as a poet since those days, but I still find this haunting and can remember the specific circumstances in which I wrote it, even the dress.

PATTERN of NIGHT

The scarecrow shaped shadow moves ahead

bumping the goldenrod.

Pattern of night, shake yourself out.

A cloth-covered woman steps forward

feeling the sound of wind.

Pattern of night blow yourself out.

 

My arms and billowing dress

play with their shadow,

my body feels more than dry wind,

tonight I am enchanted

as the unicorn comes out to dance with me

while night patterns float together—

disappearing mist.

I am particularly fond of W.S. Merwin’s poetry, not to mention his work in restoring native habitat in Hawaii. This poem, another favorite of mine, seems fitting for ending a year. I wrote it within the last decade. It was never published.

WORN WORDS

Merwin wrote, “it is the late poems

that are made of words

that have come the whole way.”

 

Yes, in these late years

we turn to those worn words

those words that have traveled with us

bringing light, darkness in turn

the days and nights of life

grown old, tired, with frayed edges

but meaning is there

in them we find peace,

those faithful worn words.

 

 

 

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