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.
All errors or problematic bits are my own fault.
Bragi's Bagatelles - 1. April 1st to April 17th
April 1
Some say that April is a jezebel
in all affections fickle made
and even to those friends who know her well
intemperate in mood displayed,
but shyly she may show
a smile to friend and beau,
infrequently although.
She enters on the nimbus, unafraid
of storm and mighty winds that blow
across the calendar from March that flayed
the shore, the mountain, and plateau;
but through the weary pine
she may a face benign
allow herself to shine.
It’s true that April wanders to and fro
from frowning face to visage fine
and sunny warmth to unexpected snow
while sometimes both she may combine;
so she may weave a spell
upon the hill and dell
to make the maples swell.
When April ages, she shows not a line
approaching daily to her knell
when all caprice must certainly decline
and passing rages calmly quell;
for she is greened, not greyed,
in every bloom and blade
the surge of life obeyed.
April 2
There’s me
who teaches math,
venerating vectors,
delighting in derivatives,
and e,
but then
there’s my subtle, subjective self
which today loves Chopin
and on Tuesday
craves jazz.
April 3
The first mouse
was born blind, innocent,
and neither had either parent sinned;
he failed to wash, as instructed, in sacred pools,
but instead developed a habit
of pursuing random
farm spouses.
The second
was afflicted later
by macular degeneration,
on which he blamed his impoverished upbringing;
he was increasingly dependent
on following sounds in
the kitchen.
Number three
stood for holy orders,
yet retained abiding attraction
to others like himself, despite the priests’ teaching;
they said his eyes dimmed prematurely,
because of habitual
self-pleasure.
April 4
You’d think I’d know a thing or maybe two,
for I am not an innocent,
and in some quiet moment I will think
of many things magnificent,
like graceful silver pitcher polished bright,
or Mom’s blue china Dresden plates
residing in the cabinet beside
the crystal, which it antedates.
Yet when I ponder deeper, I reflect
that these things aren’t my chief delight,
for things like these inevitably pass
and fail to keep me up at night;
instead, the things the satisfy me best
are greater though they seem so small –
a smile, a hug, or laughter in the sun,
and things that are not things at all.
April 5
From time to time a stone like me will speak
though ears of other creatures cannot tune
themselves to hear our converse picayune
which may sound much like rustle, crunch or creak.
Still, modest metamorphs have views to seek
on matters sedimental or the moon,
or fashion dressed in fossil or in rune,
and happenings political this week.
However trivial our thoughts may sound,
on rare occasion humankind should heed
what’s said by us who lie upon the ground,
for when we shout, tectonic plates are freed;
injustice and contempt may come unwound
as when Love rode past on his humble steed.
April 6
Fire ascends
as quick as a crackle;
minuscule explosions of matter
flare and come untethered from mundane existence,
flee up the flue to newfound freedom,
where, depressed by cold air,
it descends.
What is burned
required lifetimes to grow,
thousands of sunsets glowed gold to red
while winter changed to summer and back overhead
and countless leaves withered and lay, dead
before it was cut low
and returned.
Now the heart
is consumed by a flame
which eats up in heat every caution
built up over decades like dry, dense growth rings
marking the years of drought and famine
to be ignited by
affection.
April 7
The hearth is cold and cheerless,
no ashes in the grate
nor embers burning fearless
of snowfall coming late;
the copper kettle’s sullen,
it sings no cheerful tune
of gatherings lucullan
beneath the harvest moon.
The feast for friend and neighbor
awaits a crackling blaze
built by the woodsman’s labor
in autumn’s frosty days;
thus kindling we must gather
if ever we might mend
the harm which careless blather
has brought us to this end;
a fire to warm the kitchen,
makes food for us to share
including those who pitch in
and fill each vacant chair
with ears and hearts which listen
to sentiment and thought,
so when we all have risen
we love the way we ought.
April 8
By the departure gate
streams a constant flow
of those who come and go
enough to populate a good-sized town
complete with high school cap and gown
and those who come home late;
I watch them who step slow
with grey heads tilted down
while young ones playing clown
who have no patience in their hearts to wait
or circumvent a balding pate,
in mind still lithe, although.
And I must look around
that somewhere in the spate
which moves without abate,
in hopes to see a face who I will know
that takes a moment to bestow
a smile in which to drown.
April 9
Behind the chimney, and to the left
silver light cascades over the roof
and transforms its worn, mossy shingles
into dapple riffles that may dance
like the waters of the creek below
that yearn for light unfettered by hills
with which to laugh and perhaps forget
the dark, cold ages beneath the earth
where birdsong never percolated
nor star could steer by its guiding hand
with only songs of silent stones
to promise a life above the earth
and love discovered in the storm.
April 10
I could not read by starlight
or write a tender sonnet if I wished;
Orion might as well have fished
as labored in the dark of night.
My pen would miss the margin
and wander like a planet on the page:
should I the shadowed foolscap gauge,
my words would look like Mandarin.
It’s best to put my notes down
that I might watch the Milky Way appear
and greet the constellations dear
as they the darkened mountains crown.
April 11
Cable knit sweaters stretched over broad shoulders,
lingering scents of a savory supper,
rock maple logs crackling fierce in the woodstove,
single malt whiskey poured neat to two fingers,
books waiting, stacked, by the green velvet wing-back;
snow falling fitfully into night’s curtain
carries the news of rising northwesterly
gales to inspire the trees to psalmody,
tunes to lament losses winter inflicted;
only enhances a sense of harmony
shared by survivors of yet one more season;
such are my comforts and treasured diversions
soon to be folded and packed for next fall.
April 12
I found it yesterday,
a tattered fragment of lined paper
torn hastily from a notebook
and folded into quarters,
containing contact information
for a boyhood friend
who moved in opposite directions to me
and I thought lost.
I unfolded the yellowed, rough-edged note
and read the plain letters in blue ink
which gave me old information,
but no news,
plain text,
but no message.
I’m left to wonder now if I should
act on that faded intention
and call the number that must be wrong by now
if only to say “I’m sorry”
to some unlucky stranger,
or to discard this last chance at reconnection
as hopeless.
April 13
One bright planet shines
above the western skyline,
pursuing the sun.
~
Two purple croci,
survivors of the snowstorm,
invite early bees.
~
Three redwing blackbirds
call from twisted wild grapevines
to claim the brown marsh.
~
Four long-tailed ducks bob
On the pond’s whitecapped surface
Watching for eagles.
~
Five snowdrops cluster
Beside the rhododendron
Sheltered from the storms.
~
Six deer stand transfixed
beneath Orion’s raised hand
prepared for escape.
~
Seven sleek seagulls
circle around the late sun
in search of supper.
April 14
Will you walk
down to the bay with me
in hopes of viewing a manatee,
or a crocodile with its inscrutable smile
at something the pelican proposed
while the egret dozed
and we gawk?
All in vain
we set out on our way
under skies both blustery and grey
as the west wind backs around to blow from downtown
so that all we can possibly see
are white caps on the sea
in the rain.
April 15
Today your birthday would have been,
your sixty ninth, or maybe
seventy one, I’m not too sure,
for I’ve lost count since that day
when I arrived to say goodbye
and you stopped getting older.
Together those you loved again
sit down around the table
since travelling around the globe
so we new tales can retail,
remarking on a few grey hairs
which were not there the last time.
It seems to fit the day
that we should bake Mother’s cake,
with chocolate icing we all loved,
though each recalls a different
method we might use to make it;
and as voices rise, I miss
your indulgent laughter which could
settle our pointless disputes;
for you would know how many eggs
and how much butter was used
to make that traditional treat
in celebration of you.
April 16
I’ve climbed hills,
some of them beautiful,
with long views from great granite outcrops
and weathered spruces bent toward dawn by the west wind;
my legs now struggle to ascend them
but at their summits, I’ll
catch my breath.
Some mountains
are worth the day to climb
and not just for vistas at the top,
but also for a glimpse into worlds once possible
and still accessible for others,
pinnacles to defend
and die on.
April 17
God in his wisdom made the fly
And then forgot to tell us why. – Ogden Nash
If in God’s image I am made
then tricks on painters old were played,
for I’m no studly patriarch,
but quite pear shaped, as I have weighed.
I’ve thought that my genetic mark
ought not to have been on the Ark,
yet there it was, stored snug and dry,
beside the sloth and meadowlark.
In Eden, one might simplify,
was beauty wrought to charm the eye,
though such does not describe my form
and so beholders wonder why.
Was I divine, and not the norm,
or are my fellows in the swarm
more like what He prepared and clayed
beneath a gaze divine and warm?
Many thanks to you for reading this month's first offering. I hope at least one or two of these tickled your fancy. Any comments or reactions are most welcome. My thanks go to @Valkyrie for providing prompts to jumpstart and inspire.
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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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