The Requirement of Spring

still-winter

Ash Wednesday it opened, the first daffodil
under gray skies, near the rock pile, just the one
blowing about on its pale green thin stem
come brightly unfolding in winters chill.

Now a cold wind pesters about from all directions
bringing dark clouds filled with hail bits, blasts of rain,
threats of snow in the night and in the early morn.
Still it is winter and still just the one daffodil.

Spring comes, I know, all else says it’s so, but spring
leaves us wanting it bright and quick to come
hurry to usurp this winters persistent and dark rumble
wearing at our willingness to wait, so weary.

Come, spring!  Why need you an equinoxian turn
when other seasons linger long or too early arrive?
Come, spring!  Bring on your abundant breaking
through the doors of winter as has this daffodil done.


Portland, Oregon – March 5, 2017

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Photos are my own, taken March 5, 2017

Moon of the Red Blooming Lilies

Outside my window grows the summer
sweet garden – resplendent, redolent, still
in the morning dew damp chill.
She does not know about the hours, how
a clock tick captures in mechanical tock.

She knows the sun’s arc, pouring
rain, warm sweet laying ground
under silver white moon urge
tide surge and nights sweeping
over flowers unfolding in rose, lavender,
sweet pea, all the tall grasses –
unfettered by segmented time
broken moments of loss or dread.

I?  I know about time, succumb
as if it were my only
spun and twirling destiny.
What few seasons come and go
that we bloom –
flowers of creation’s fertile desires –
Unfolding under the moon
of the red blooming lilies
without time but this.


Portland, Oregon – July 9, 2016

My title, “Moon of the Red Blooming Lilies” comes from my recent reading of Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee, a classic telling of the tragic story of the destruction of the native peoples of this land, from the side of those who were destroyed.  The author, Dee Brown, does a masterful job of telling the story.  He often added the names of seasons as the native peoples called them.  In this case, the “moon of the red-blooming lilies” corresponds roughly to July.  It is a book I should have read long ago and recommend highly.

 

Spring Garden

Spring Garden 4.11.16

Deception in spring’s beauty
lovely garment of green, yellow, blue
that does not tell
speaks not nor whispers of autumn
will not say from what cold and darkness it came
forgotten winter altogether.

Fools believe in beauty lasting
rising green through damp and dark earth
on which to count life’s days
towards eternal spring.

Fools cavort in flowered fields
dance in coronal suns shine
traipse in petals, seeds,
dead and dark autumn fallen leaves;
twirl in imprudent delight
as imps and fairies
in forgotten worlds
timeless whorls
endless whirls.


Portland, Oregon – April 11, 2016
Photo is my own, taken this date.

Under The Maple Tree

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Fountain pool’s light and water
under maple branch and leaf
tulip yellow curling petals
near the pathway greens of spring.

I will fill the fountain basin
when the tulip fades away
wait for spring to come in splendor
underneath the spreading maple tree.

Another one will fill the fountain
watch the tulip raise its head
sit in stillness by the pathway
as the spring wind stirs the maple leaves.


Portland, Oregon – April 6, 2016
Photo is my own, taken this date.

Sadly, the falling branches of our ponderosa pine sheared off half of the maple during an ice storm, December 2016.  These rest did not then survive.