Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Thirty Daze in April - 1. April 1 to April 7
April 1
April,
fey, capricious,
green-eyed and grey-clad youth,
dancing in puddles for its sheer
delight;
come play,
open crocuses and colt’s-foot,
awaken bees and bears,
and call me as
your love.
April 2
Open then
this door fixed tightly shut
with straight nails hand-forged by the blacksmith
and sealed by expectations of our ancestors
against newfangled winds that might blow
from the direction of
acceptance.
April 3
I had to wear that ghastly tie today,
the one in polyester whole and pure
and garish tasteless pattern on display
with colors like diseases with no cure.
I know it was a well-intentioned gift,
a present from a once and future friend,
and I would not be one to cause a rift,
nor by neglect my patron to offend.
I must admit my neckwear made heads turn,
observers curiosity to pique,
attention snared, and cause for some concern:
I earned a comment from a charming geek.
So I’ve got news in case you haven’t heard,
I think I’m falling for a handsome nerd.
April 4
Come to my hand, little bird, little bird,
promise I’ll say not a word, not a word;
take from my hand just a seed and return
off to your branch in the scrub and the fern.
Don’t be afraid, chickadee, chickadee,
hush not your sweet melody, melody;
I will stand guard against merciless claw,
feather or fur with a bottomless maw.
Perch on my glove, take your time, take your time,
or use my hat if you climb, if you climb;
here will I stay till you’ve eaten your fill
and you go back to your home on the hill.
April 5
The classroom desk in April or in May
becomes an instrument of torture fine
for those who spend the best part of the day
on this side of the window by design.
This brittle fence will let us see the sun,
but mutes returning birdsong to a trace,
dividing us from fields where we might run
or mossy glades where lovers oft embrace.
So here I sit behind the panes of glass,
participating not in spring’s parade
and counting cold, dead minutes as they pass
until the final bell ends my charade.
Then I am free to sample vernal charms,
forsaking walls to run into your arms.
April 6
Those pines,
planted eighty-five years ago
by a troop of boys scouts
toiling in their
khakis
now raise
their proud green heads
and climb the hill in ranks
ready to do battle with the
west wind.
We all
remember it’s very bad luck
to cut down a hawthorn;
twisted, bitter,
spiteful,
and yet
with its brief charm
when veils of white blossoms
shelter house wrens and orioles
who sing.
Do not
fret at the willow’s yellow tears
flowing down by the stream
mingled with chilled
waters;
I can’t
weep for willows;
their spirits are hollow,
their sadness all cynical and
skin-deep.
April 7
I knew her
in her late retirement
still clothed in vivid white and brown
perfectly content in her snug home on the hill,
happy to wander in her garden,
welcoming visitors
with a neigh.
- 1
- 12
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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