Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Crickets And Crows

    After a three year hiatus (except for one poem), I'm now resuming this blog. I'll be sharing a selection of poems written over the past few years, mostly in chronological order, as well as an occasional drawing. Most of the poems and drawings will be accompanied by a brief prose commentary. Here we go!


EARLY MORNING WALK


dawn breaking
hardly another soul about
just a cat crouching in the grass

*

not a car coming
not a truck going
no need for the traffic light

*

perched on the rim
of the trash container
still as sculpture--a hawk!

*

these homeless sleeping
small islands huddled
on the slopes of the park

*

even before sunrise
this dancing fountain
celebrates the new day!

*

tiny, reddish, so fast!
whatever it was
bolted into the bushes!

*

sun coming up
in the east, moon
going down in the west

*

dew-covered lawn
the tip of every grass blade
catches fire!

*

green lichen grows
such intricate patterns
on the dead branch

*

bathing in a puddle
feathers fluffed out
that robin looks happy!

*

big fat toadstool
you've found the perfect spot
hidden in the damp shade

*

from the vanishing
pockets of darkness
crickets keep singing

***


     I've long loved Japanese Haiku, and every now and then I write them, usually in a single poem sequence, as here. I adhere to the brief, traditional 3-line format, but I don't worry about a rigid, 17-syllable count for each poem. After all, these are American Haiku. During my walk, I'd been struck by so many vivid moments! After I got home I quickly jotted them down. Later, when I sought to render my experience in verse, Haiku seemed the ideal form, as individual pearls on a strand all combine to create a glowing necklace.



                                  DAWN FLIGHT


these crows roosted restlessly above the city streets last night
now they teeter on the topmost branches of a towering tree
then plunge into the sky again--caw-cawing to wake the dead--
shadows dwindling toward a faint blood smear on the horizon

one part of the man watching at the window flies with them
riding the winds to raid and plunder farm fields far to the east
black and glittering his crow's eye! sharp and jabbing his beak!
dark and wild his fierce heart drumming in its tiny cage of ribs!


                                            ***


     The crow is my totem animal, and as a poet I feel a shaman's identification with it. But I think we all have a much greater affinity with nature than we're usually aware of. We need to get out of our heads more, and into our hearts and guts. That's where the other creatures live, and until we can join them there, we'll always be consuming and destroying their only world, and ours.



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