To The Sky We Look, To The Earth We Succumb
An emergence,
the glimmer of ignorance
Hope unmarred,
a dance with clear,
but careless steps
Yet, somehow–
nurtured disappointment is
sewn to elusive nature,
balanced webs spinning
fables within the strangest
of dreamscapes...
Hard earned lessons found
sinking, sinking,
sinking as the world
demands too much
Even through the bliss
of honeysuckle lips and
jasmine nights, delicate
curvature pulled taut
by the absence of time,
there lives a yearning
for completion, to be fastened
to the wholeness of strength
and its complexities
and though the open petals
glisten sweetly in
the softlight of the moon,
though the grip is firm, desperate,
it knows where peace will lie--
the fates do as they please
Bound to the spinning of the
wheel, daggers nick limbs,
expose bone, and forces the angel
to fall, weeping, mourning,
as grace dissolves into the sea
The North Star mocks with the way
she defies the moon and darts
hopelessly from the sun
But time, slipping through
crooked, calloused fingers
its granules catching beneath
splitting, deficient nails, cares little
for the trivialities of
honeysuckle dreams and the way
hopeful hands tremble
within the clock face
Nature, the ageless coquette
succubus, seductress,
ferocious in her passion
opens herself, promising peace
within the warmth
of her earthen bed
Rest, she whispers,
Time won't find us here.
Seven Blossom Tea
The tea I drink is made of
linden, valerian, manita
tilia, passionflower,
lemon balm and mint
The petals, leaves, stems,
and sometimes roots
are steeped into a
weary woman's potion
Linden quiets the noise,
slows the racing of
a fair-weather heart
Valerian grounds me,
helps me find a pen
and focuses inspiration
Manita siphons woe,
pulls the weight
from body and soul
Tilia welcomes,
optimism swirling
in its cheery fragrance
Passionflower graces me,
offering sweet, simple
fleeting indulgence
Lemon balm remembers,
reminds me of a lesson
My notebook opens
Mint clears the fog,
pieces a vision, and my
pen meets printed line
Like seven blossom tea,
I too, am made from
leaves, petals, stems,
and sometimes roots
Weary, woeful woman
made of bud and bloom
seeking peace, writing spells
--and sometimes poems
Seeds take root-- leaves begin to sprout and flatten eagerly in the sun, taking in the warmth of its story
Leaves rest in perfect silence
being, listening
A miniscule bud peeks through the wisdom of the leaves, and with slow, patient, seductive time, opens thirsting petals
The sun strikes on knowledge innate
listening, questioning
Greenery rises and falls, sprouts and withers, swayed by the creeping seasons, by what the sun allows
Rain drenches petals but nourishes roots
questioning, yearning
Betrothed to the cycle, the garden joins itself with what has been, what is and what will be, refuses the stink-rot of stagnancy
The sun, She seeks change, too
yearning, knowing
The poet is of the Earth and Sky, interwoven, formed within the space that lies between the line; employed to enchant, enlighten, entomb
The poet: rooted vessel for perspective
knowing, being
Worldsong
From the stars, I rise
stumbling through the sunlight
Borne from Diyu's haze
Summoning cherubs
winking at simplicities
Consequence, she waits
Roots seek quiet earth,
sacred bonds of creation
Like the bud, I bloom
As dust seeks trinkets
I convene with time's good grace--
The pale horse beckons
I sift through the ash
dancing into stretched shadows
With the stars, I meld
Haibun Yin
In the way that you mourn for the past-- dying embers floating lonesome, seeds
burning into the shrouded night, like you, like me. it carries not comfort of warmth-of worth- but burning, singed skin flushed with spiking chemicals and fraying lace, so seductive in its familiarity, raging temptress of poor resolve
You, me, arrested
dance atop the angered coals
Moonlight, she deceives
Cotyledon
Cotyledon, I push forth
through the damp earth, reaching
for the humidity and heat
beckoning me from my shell
Gemini, made of stem and leaf,
champion of wishful thinking-
--what comes next?
I knew that I would be a tree
mighty oak, reaching for the stars
with reckless abandon
But back then, the heavens were
too far, and the tiny hands
of tiny creatures came and tore
me at the root, smashed my leaves
between jagged, yellow teeth
I thought surely, I will never stretch
toward the sky again
But those tiny hands and jagged teeth
did not touch the parts that sat firmly
in the earth, more deeply than greedy hands
would think to look
From my roots, I sprout again
Cotyledon, I push through
the familiar earth, unafraid, prepared
Never meant for a shell