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.
Erato's Olio: Poems for NaPoWriMo 2022 - 1. April 1 - April 8, 2022
April 1
Late March glooms
with penitential snow,
neither unseasonal nor unknown,
as if the earth could cover itself in sackcloth
and shiver in its contemplation
of trusting its future
to mankind.
Stray snowflakes
wander without purpose
separate from the central flurry,
and float across the field on the wind’s unseen breath
with no inclination to hasten
their desultory descent
to my tongue.
New fire glows
east of the morning star
where china blue fades to pink and gold
and maples raise their branches in supplication
to the horizon’s enkindled light
for the gift of green warmth
and birdsong.
April 2
If I have eyes to count the endless stars
then how to measure space between
those finite scintillating dots of light
which mark the void with shimmering?
for blackness has no demarcated depth
nor can our science overcome
its silent span across infinity
where angel songs will never hum.
If vastness dwarfs whatever I may know
then I must look down to the earth
to understand each stone and blade of grass
or where the beetle finds its berth.
yet wedged between these wonders so revealed
interstices yet more profound
appear where bold electrons whirl and dance
to joyous subatomic sound.
April 3
I saw stars
overhead in the sky
where lately clouds overshadowed night
and masked the silver moon beneath their layered quilts
revealing nothing of their patterns
till daylight groaned again
to show them.
I saw sky
through threadbare torn stratus,
and to the west, the cold front’s frayed hem
revealed the constellations in all their glory,
the ravishing naked flesh of night
exposed to mortal eyes
in wonder.
I saw light
faint upon the east ridge
where barren oak trees anticipate
a full spectrum of color in bud and blossom,
far more brilliant than autumn’s attire,
enough to extinguish
loneliness.
April 4
‘Neath the foaming waves so high,
No leviathan am I
sporting with a blow and sigh
object of the hue and cry;
Flotsam weedy rather more,
drifting past the man-‘o-war
of no use to carnivore,
destined to wash up on shore.
I’ll not rock nor island be;
just a sandspeck by the sea,
listening to its timpani,
pondering infinity.
April 5
Hope is made
from pale yellow-blue dawn,
and dew left in the night like diamonds
to glint from every bud and branch in the garden;
it’s formed from green crocus shoots rising
through last year’s leaves, and of
birds singing.
Hope tastes sweet
after February’s snows
smother the flavors of Christmastime,
and the bitter tang left behind by late March storms;
it’s subtle scent lingers in the mist
when the frogs start to call
for their mates.
Hope sounds like
swans flying overhead
calling down from the stars in the night;
it’s in the symphony of thundering rivers
accompanied by the roaring wind,
while the trees swoon and rave
like young teens.
April 6
When war slips from its chains to rage and burn
and prey upon the children’s peace,
its jaws run red with shattered innocents,
the world bewailing its release.
Its human quarry sprawls with mouth agape
amid bleak, burned out, ruined streets
where late the beast its boundless maw had fed
an appetite that none defeats.
This is no sweet domesticated pet
of generals and presidents;
no leash nor cage its fury can contain,
and no rule saves from its torments.
Yet vigilance this hound may circumscribe;
our courage might its instincts bind
to silence this dark animal for all
when wisdom comes to humankind.
April 7
Under a small blue tent
hands joined, hearts full,
we stand by the neat hole
in the green turf
while low grey clouds bow veiled heads
to the green hills
and weep sad tears with us
on a north wind
while the pines mutter prayers,
sighing those hymns
we have no strength to sing
till the sparrows
take up their old refrain
taught us in youth:
“Poor Sam Peabody, Peabody!”
and twelve heads rise,
realizing all at once
we said goodbye.
April 8
My bodhran
sits mute by the window
where it can hear the patter of rain
and watch the lightning flash and feel rumbling thunder
shaking and rattling the windowpanes,
while the whole house vibrates
with music.
On the shelf
sits my concertina,
its buttons cranky and reeds untuned;
a fine coating of dust covers its cracked varnish
and spots have discolored its bellows,
yet the keys still recall
how to dance.
I can’t play
the mountain dulcimer
my brother built for me as a gift,
despite all his earnest instruction and coaching;
only he could prompt its plaintive voice
to sing those songs we knew
as children.
Thank you very much for reading these. My particular thanks go to those who may have avoided poetry in the past, but gave this a try. If you have any rants, raves or rambles, please do leave them in a comment. I appreciate anything you may have to say.
- 10
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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