Advent – Come!

I do not wish for more to come than has come
piling up in thick layers, smothering
the society we have stitched from the cloth
of history, woven with strands of doubt
of error, patched with blood and care.

We wake in the morning with relief
having flailed through sleep fragments
dream chaos and thickening coughs
that push silence to the far corners,
peace into the dark and hidden closet.

“Do not come!” if what comes are more
battered days of human failure and betrayal.
“Go away!” Let us have the time we need
to repair what is breaking in us –
our beliefs, the symbols we thought
would sustain our already fragile faith.
Let racing time slow to accord
with this natural season – fallen leaves,
frozen ponds, sun’s light sliding
low and long across the wintry horizon –
the seasons’ lights, the veiled half moon.

We have time enough for this, to quiet and still.
It is enough to say, because we’ve learned
from our traditions and hold to them
as to a branch hanging over an abyss,
unknowing and feebly but from deep within: “Come!” 


Portland, Oregon – December 3, 2019.  The season of Advent is a Christian liturgical season which ends on December 24th, this year.  It is a traditional time of waiting, of stillness – in hopeful preparation for the coming of joy – silent night, holy night, night divine. May all traditions be welcome to join in this sacred time.

A Thin Illusion

Lying on my morning bed
light dawning in stillness
I wake from America’s dream
it’s images spiraling away
snuffed, as a candle’s wick, out.
Diffused with poisons in it’s past
it could not last the night.

It is my drowsy awakening, ours,
to a harsh and revealing sight
the world new in the day’s light
now we have opened our eyes
to see what has always been
while we hid behind a thin illusion,
a finely crafted veil hiding nothing.

The shining ideal, well meant but never true,
called to us in our darkness
deceived and mesmerized us – a chimera
until we forgot it was but kindling
for the refining fire of true democracy –
all equal and welcome – none forgotten.

Awaken, awaken, America!
A more perfect union awaits
but not if we sleep and dream
or if, in our drowsing slumbers,
we allow to awaken again and again
our loathsome and beckoning demons.


Portland, Oregon – February 17, 2018

Death of a Bird

A small bird flew into my window
as I was looking out.
I went to see how he fared
what was his fate.
He was lying on the ground
twitching as a scrub jay stood over him
picked him up, carried him
to the limb of a sumac
began to pluck out his feathers
scatter them to the day’s gray drizzle
to float in the air down to my feet
in tribute to one who handed him over
for it was my window that was the cause.

As if I were part of the play
I threw a stone at the jay
who dropped his victim from the limb
onto the stone path, alive no longer
eyes open, blank, gone.
The stone fell into my neighbor’s yard.

The jay quietly waited higher up in the sumac.
I walked away knowing I had come too late
could do nothing to save.

There are things I do not wish to see
events about suffering and death
when all I feel is helpless and weak
all I can do is watch or turn away.

I returned to the place minutes later –
the birds were gone.
The jay, I know, will return.


Portland, Oregon – April 23, 2017

Sanctuary

Where is the place I can go, to hide
where no one can find me, secreted
within moss encrusted glades, lost
under stars hovering in radiant silence?

I did not find this place when I was young
or in the years when I gave my life to labor.
Then, thought I, rest will come, a time
of ease, when I can tend my spring garden
under the sheltering gaze of the past
beneath the western setting sun.

Yet, shouts of the present sound about me
calling my name, “where are you, where are you?”
I am loathe to say, “here I am, here I am”
wishing to tuck my head beneath broad leaves
into shadows cast by evergreen sentinels
watching over me, whispering stories
of what was, what is, what may yet be.

Hemmed I about by witnesses ancient and holy
birthed under the canopy of these northwest woods –
the peoples of the land chanting in my ears
pacific surf pounding inside me,
rattling old bones of memory and fear.

There is nowhere to go in this age
no sanctuary or safe harbor where I,
untouched by the swirl of clamoring voices,
can say “All is well, all will be well”
and feel inside that it is so, will be so.

The world – old, resplendent, grace filled –
beckons me out of all my hiding places
with the calm of wind through cedars,
the delight of birds alighting on branches, preening.
They are the touches, voices, and movements
of the present in its oft forgotten glory,
filtering, through green lavish life, the cacophony
swirling, in and all about me, furiously.


Portland, Oregon – March 3, 2017

I began this piece thinking about sanctuary for my brothers and sisters who fear deportation from our country.  I need do what I can to support and assist them.  But, as to poetry, I find that poems bend back to self before they can go elsewhere.  For poets, the question is appropriate: “It’s all about you, isn’t it?”

No Poem. Protest. Resist.

The horror in America continues today
begun in fear, ending in suffering and death
while those in power gloat
without conscience, humility
integrity, courage, or love.

What have we left but to resist
to assuage the guilt we have
that we did not do enough
to stop this madness?
Now, we have no other choice.


Portland, Oregon – January 20, 2017

Today, our country inaugurated a child-fool for President – a malicious, self-serving lying narcissist who has no concern but for himself.  I believe we, our country, and the world will pay an enormous price for our folly.

Prayer for Martin Luther King, Jr.

Cold wind this morning. Clear sky sun bloom
snowy pretty winter scene from a recoiling past.

Now, our nations night deep freeze
in dark days shrouding the lands head
frigid days of ice hardening crevice and creek
cold pressing sharp on every thought –
suffering in street’s shabby tents and shelters
wretched poverty in mining mountains
fear haunting heartland fields and pastures
vast parking lots of America covered in the ice of anger
swept by the cold wind of vindictive and violent fear
hooded in white – hateful, ignorant, afraid.

Cold clear morning, sunlit in gilt on iced snow
stands Martin, shadow covering the land
speaking a dream in warm currents of light
healing balm of sun to shake from tall trees snow showers of ice
green once again with spring hearts of life
lift in light blind seeds of sweet mercy
to feast, all at last, on the fruit of the living land.


Portland, Oregon – January 16, 2016 – Celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr., his words, vision, and dream.

Waking a Sleeping Dragon

Serene in a stilled lair
folded in many layered scales
of sleep, revelry, stupor
hiding flames within.

Will the dragon wake…
struck with a large stick,
dropped onto its drowsy head boulders
heaved from high places and gold palaces?

Forgotten power hidden, long lying
silent, unruffled, unheard, forgetting
the power of fire to forge a world.


Portland, Oregon – December 20, 2016

I try not to get too political in my postings.  Read such politics as you will into this little piece.

Oceti Sakowin

Rivers join, long flowing
in time and space within the land.
The buffalo plains a swept grace –
prairie grass flowing in eternal wind,
heads of grain lifted above the snowfall –
seven fires of unquenchable flame.

Oceti Sakowin

Oyate – born of the land – gather
in unmeasured time, passing
in cloud form, leaf quiver, snow fall
beneath forever stars,
burning sun strewn in layers
across their faces, raised hands
over life-giving streams
blossoming from the far hills
running where horses drink
sacred water of holy places.

Oceti Sakowin


Portland, Oregon – December 6, 2016

Like many, I have been moved by the actions of the water protectors at Standing Rock in North Dakota.  I believe it is an important, perhaps seminal action which will long be remembered.

Oceti Sakowin – The proper name for the people commonly known as the Sioux is Oceti Sakowin, (Och-et-eeshak-oh-win) meaning Seven Council Fires. The original Sioux tribe was made up of Seven Council Fires.  (Oceti Sakowin – Akta Lakota Museum & Cultural Center – aktalakota.stjo.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=8309)

The Day After

Feeling of slow motion fall
through northwest November rain
as the world I thought I knew
passes through watery elements
washed, drowned in apocalyptic fear.
Too soon to say, know, fathom
how to remake a world, create an idea
with others from broken pieces,
fractured remains of the dark day –
now the day after.
Time and rain are tools we have
things we will need to begin.


Portland, Oregon – November 9, 2016

The day following the horrible, terrible, no good, bad day in America.

The Bell

When bombs drop
drones strike
snipers fire
who is killed
but I?
The bell keeps its toll
Bong
Bong
Bong
ringing in the pale cloudless evening
peeling in the song of morning birds
clanging
can’t it stop clanging?

It tolls for me
I made it so
I pushed the button
looked through the sight
pulled the trigger.
You say I did not
I say I did
for all that I did not.

Taps is played
flags furled, found
trampled in the dirt
of places I’ve never been.
We make our way home
in the quiet of night
have a cocktail
cheer the brave lads
sleep disquieted sleep.


Portland, Oregon – April 27, 2016

As an American citizen, if I do not recognize my part in the horrors inflicted on the world by our weapons and our own brand of terrorism, then I am just choosing blindness.

Of course, inspired by the Rev. John Donne’s “For Whom the Bell Tolls.”