Monthly Archives: May 2016

Short List Of Surprise

this world, where terrible things have happened,
but still we are surprised
by our capacity to be
Surprised Again—

hummingbirds
forgotten tulips planted in long ago autumn
two cracked open robin’s eggs, one empty
our town, from the crest of the hill —
tucked into the valley
           glistening like a hobbit’s village
mice and spiders, almost always
a paper letter in our blue metal mailbox
dandelions, all at once
And you—What surprises you?

Roads Need Maps Like Songs Need Singers

Written in response to prompt at The Sunday Whirl

Every change requires a new map
said my little old auntie
when she took up chanting
instead of talking so every
conversation became a song
a memory of high Mass except
instead of priests wielding incense
a gray-haired lady in a flowered dress
asks if you’d like a bit more peach pie.
After lunch, you take a walk
Gregorians on the radio
got her started, she explains in chant
Block after block she chants
the whole town takes up the habit
the grocer, the baker, the candlestick maker
every ordinary exchange a melodious moment
Sometimes my auntie dances, too
especially at intersections
so it’s only a matter of time
till that starts a whole new craze
Let’s get this showwwww
on the roaddddddd, she chants to the stoplight
till it too falls into a trance and does her bidding

Totem

each day possesses
its own, fashioned from creatures
crossing this country road:
sparrow, chipmunk, deer
barn cat, collie, cow
once, a black bear
(even chickens cross this road)
Today, a red fox
in no hurry at all
looked back at me
from the green field on the other side
for one moment
in these purpose full lives,
our eyes met
exchanging some thing
neither of us could
put into words

Show, Don’t Tell

is one rule for writing
but today, I’m full of sunrise
So, reader, close the computer
and I will, too Stretch
towards the light (as if
we were flowers, flowing
into day) Hurry outside
(the best part finishes fast
don’t take time for slippers) step
onto your porch or sidewalk
lacking those, lean far out your
window, look to the East.
There. See there?
Out in the cool early air I hand you
this sunrise, shown
Rules are Rules for a reason
But before you go back to your day,
wave to whoever you see—
neighbor, dog walker, paper boy
It might be me. I’ll wave too,
in case it’s you

Chosen

wood violets nestle down
planted by no one in my garden
small lavender whispers
Down the road, wild pink phlox
scatters itself drops in thick armfuls
loud and bright across the front yard
of our neighborhood’s most
Dilapidated House
one that sheds broken chairs
trash bags plastic toys old tires
from all its doors and porches
another mystery of the natural world
Who knows how the flowers decide?

April End

A year for sorry you didn’t
move to a hemisphere
where April would behave but
then she pats your arm with her
cool damp hand and suggests
a nap. Who are you to argue?

Travel with the given season.
Prop your head against the
grimy window close your eyes
doze till the train jolts to a stop
at the edge of Spring. Someone
washed the windows while you slept
this world is one lush sweep of green
and April? April’s walking away
without even a wave and you promise
yourself to be sweeter to her
next year.

A Hundred Falling Veils

there's a poem in every day

The Novel Bunch

aka: The Happy Bookers

Red Wolf Prompts

I came to where you were living, up a stair. There was no one there.--John Ashberry, "The New Higher"

typewriter rodeo

custom poems on vintage typewriters

A Poet in Time

One Poet's Writing Practice: Poems by Mary Kendall

Writing the Day

A Ronka Poetry Practice Since 2014

Invisible Horse

Living in the moment