6.18.2007

A Tale

A long time ago

In a faraway land

That's the way that stories go

But this one, you see,

Is different than that

Listen, and then you'll know

 

In this land called faraway

A band of robbers cruel

Kept hamlets and towns

Under their pernicious rule

All knew these men of old

Their faces, smiles, names

Yet there was no chance of help

To escape from their reign

 

One day, while on a raid

Of houses in the wood

They came upon a small brown boy

Whose face, though sad, was good

His parents had been slain that day

By this very robber lord

Who even now saw him

And, being self-assured

Brought him from his hiding-place

And teased with many leers

The boy knew whom he spoke to

But his face was without fear

The robber gang did find him fine

And laughed with evil glee

And said, "Oh, here's a servant,

To sweep and make our tea!"

(They all drank no such thing, of course

They only spoke this way

Being sure of their own humor

Having garnered much that day)

 

And so the boy went home with them

And served them for a year

And after that he still was full

Of merriment and good cheer

They none of them knew this lad

For an orphan they had made

But in the mind of this small boy

There was no debt unpaid

No revenge was in his heart

No vengeance did he seek

His heart was kind; his will was strong

His mouth was quick to speak

 

He became the favorite

Of the robber lord so feared

He was left to speak his mind

And so passed many years

This boy had changed the robber band

No longer did they rule

With such an iron fist

Their hearts no longer cruel

The boy called the lord thief Father

And all the men were Brother

The cookpot and the hunting bow

Were all he had for Mother

The next year died the robber chief

The gang was left to mourn

The boy no one ever found

As though he was never born

 

But 'tis said on the eve of Midwinter's Night

When the wind howls all around

You can hear him crying, crying, crying

His soul cries from the ground

 

When the moon is full

And the geese take flight

And the wolves cry to the moon their song

You can hear him crying, crying, crying,

Singing with the wolves their song

 

He runs with the pack

And he flies with the geese

And he floats with the moon on high

He looks down and he cries, he cries, he cries

Singing with the wolves their song

 

6.15.2007

Shipwreck and Woman in Garden

Some poetry I've been working on lately.

Shipwreck

Upon the folded quilt of wrinkled hills

Into the creased and the dimpled hollows there

Where rusted lullaby drains in curved rills

Where crying cranes their mournful dirges share

Sunlight, the floating gold and fiery dust

Has now made this its last and gentle home

And in the brunneous moss-and-bracken crust

Seeks shadows in the mazes of the loam

The swelling and the felling of the sea

A mouth that weeps forth pale and foamy spume

Loping beneath sullen waves and debris

A ship into its dank, cavernous tomb

With all aboard from mastheads fore to aft

Clinging with all their lifeblood to their craft

 


Woman in the Garden

 

Like the face of a round, starkly dangerous clock

Opening wide to speak of times dire

Her eyes open now, gleaming white, gleaming black

 

Full of a dangerous time

 

Her lips are pale, blood-red her evening frock

Her hands are long and white like cranes

Her hair spills in rivulets down her arching back

 

Full of a dangerous rhyme

 

The clock, cruel and pitilessly looping round

Counting down the minutes, precious few

Until the bell of midnight must finally ring

 

Full of a dangerous chime

 

Looking out from beneath her torn gown

Legs long like leaping dolphins, she rises

And folds of crimson a hiding place bring

 

Full of a dangerous rhyme

 

The gate opens like a maw, wide, dark

And stepping forth a long-legged man

Strikes the lady; the red flower falls into the mud

 

Full of a dangerous crime

 

She knows now that her time has met its mark

She weeps like a late ocean, far too late

Alas, the tears are water not, but blood

 

Full of a dangerous time


5.04.2007

Pain Villanelle

Pain

 

Her vacant eyes are dank like her sealed heart

Her hands flutter about like homeless birds

Her empty mouth does not know where to start

 

The tearing pain is shredding her apart

She has no more, empty of thoughts or words

Her empty mouth does not know where to start

 

How can her feeble, humble words impart

All that her tortured ears have recent heard

Her vacant eyes are dank like her sealed heart

 

Her blood streams down her like some deranged art

Salty tears flow down, her vision blurred

Her empty mouth does not know where to start

 

Her dignity, so hard-won, now departs

As if by hardened madmen onward spurred

Her vacant eyes are dank like her sealed heart

 

All words have shot through her like poisoned darts

But now at last the dark voice goes unheard

Her vacant eyes are dank like her sealed heart

Her empty mouth does not know where to start

3.21.2007

I almost cried as I read this...

Twilight on Sixth Avenue at Ninth Street

by Charles G. D. Roberts

Over the tops of the houses
Twilight and sunset meet.
T
he green, diaphanous dusk
Sinks to the eager street.
Astray in the tangle of roofs
Wanders a wind of June.
The dial shines in the clock-tower
Like the face of a strange-scrawled moon.
The narrowing lines of the houses
Palely begin to gleam,
And the hurrying crowds fade softly
Like an army in a dream.
Above the vanishing faces
A phantom train flares on
With a voice that shakes the shadows, --
Diminishes, and is gone.
And I walk with the journeying throng
In such a solitude
As where a lonely ocean
Washes a lonely wood.

3.13.2007

Prayers

Let the army find us willing and ready
Let the battle go on until the enemy flees from your name
Let us realize that we are fighting now
Let us know and remember that we fight not in game
We fight for the souls of your children, O Lord
For the glory to shine on your name
We fight for their hearts to be not overshadowed
Let us know and remember that we fight not in game
We're bruised, and we're battered, our blood pours like wine
And we fight not to gain our own fame
The shots ring out loudly, the screams and the pain
Let us know and remember that we fight not in game
Let us always keep faith, let us fight with a will
And on you never place any blame
For you are our anchor in this time of blood
Let us know and remember that we fight not in game
For the cries of the victims, the wrath of the foe
For the wounds we receive, fight we maimed
For all that we have always trusted in
Let us know and remember that we fight not in game

3.07.2007

Bardy song.

A voice suddenly began to sing.

"You ask where you are, stranger?

This is a land of strife and danger.

Gwladda its name and great its good

A land of dell and swamp and wood

You ask why you're here, oh Dieithryn,

I cannot tell of all the great sin

Just be sure to watch your back

Sing on pitch and steal what you lack

You ask what, and who is speaking

Whom the fear is in you wreaking

I am a Bard, great, loved and feared

I am worshipped like a god, revered

A Bard you ask, why, don't you know?

I'm praised and honored where e'er I go

Be warned, be warned, for evil comes

To those who heed not the song I strum."

There was a silence. He stood, staring openmouthed.

"Not my best work," said the voice, "and not in the traditional rhyme scheme, but I had very little time, you must understand." He felt that he could never speak again. It was all too ridiculous for words.

2.17.2007

Homecoming

Years and years and years ago,
I thought, "Now, this is what I know,"
Never dreaming that what I knew
Could ever change my point of view
Never thinking that perhaps
I would lose all of those maps
And have to strike out on my own
Lost, cold, far away from home
Then something caught my eye
A bright flash, blinding, from the sky
And said, "Well, who the heck are you?
Who thought that you knew what to do?
Now here you are and here you've come
But it seems to me that it's kind of dumb
To be wand'rin' round with no home base
Tell me, be there brains behind that face?"
Then I tried to yell right back
But it was just a sort of quack,
And I said, "I'm trying, leave me alone."
It laughed and said, "You're far from home.
You think you know things, yes indeed.
You had no one, nothing to need.
You were doing great, and happy, fine,
All on your own, but you are mine.
You can't fool me, I see those scars,
I see those eyes like dimming stars,
I see those blisters, those sore legs
I see your faith, drained to the dregs.
You tried to go on with no map,
And I applaud, oh yes, I clap,
But there's no good end to that road
There is no warm and safe abode
Just keep the rules that I have made,
Your life is saved, your demons slayed,
Set out no more, to weep, to roam!
Just take my hand, and we'll go home."