Life In Progress

The beautiful changes

The Springtime of Love

as you unwrap
the seconds in today and the present
of tomorrow

may you find tomorrow's years climbing perenniallyBill-And-Robert
like lavender morning glories across
the arc of a grand, garden trellis

Dedicated to Bill & Robert
Copyright © 2004-2009 by the authors
Special thanks to Christine for help in the crafting

November 22, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

The Ark of Genesis

Countless  milky waves of stars,
arcing across a shore-less sky,
guiding a fleet of planetary life rafts,
in due course, toward time's end.

The  disheveled and coy
order in nature presented anew
with each season
and each discovery.

The misty arc of the rainbow
where star fire plays
in among the rain droplets
to the delight of a child.

The teeming ark of all creatures,Ngc2997_1
great and small, coursing,
in the flutter of a divine moment,
through infinite possibility.

Dedicated to Greg
Copyright © 2004-2009 by the authors

December 13, 2006 in Poetry | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Forever You

It should be a song, your Valentine,
full of laughter and a sweet splash
of all those things the world holds dear

one where you walk on the cusp of womanhood,
radiantly dressed in a sleeveless sundress
printed with fresh-cut, pink roses
from  creation's first Spring.

It should be a song
sprinkled with the croonings of life long love
or the bittersweet riffs of a painfully short romance

one where you step forward out of the moonlight
your unkempt hair in free fall about your face
and your outstretched hand offering a bouquet of dreams -
one where you are forever you.

It should be a song.

Dedicated to Jenny
Copyright © 2004-2009 by the authors

March 25, 2006 in Poetry, Valentines | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Yellow Jessamine

Some crisp morning -
miles from the workings in town that move the world's freight -
as you canter along the ring of tall Georgia pine 
that guards a grassy glade you fancy as yours,

you'll stop as always beside a splash of musical creek
and loosen your white mare's tack before sitting -
your back firm against the trunk of a sheltering pine -
to watch tall, green grasses dance on the edges of the wind. 

One crisp morning,
he'll come step by step across the glade, stooping haphazardly
to gather daisies and fashion an unfashionable bouquet
mussed and tangled with the wild grasses of friendship and love.

Your heart will quicken as he stills the nickering of your anxious
mare and banishes the ghost of a freight train whistle
rising from its haunt near town. In your bower,
across the threshold of Spring, look for your Valentine.

That crisp morning,
let your eyes climb along the vine climbing the needled skirt
of the sheltering pine and clip the first yellow blossom,
star-shaped and spiced with feisty fragrance. 

Place it in your hair and resume your ridingYellowjessamine
or loosen the pocket of his tousled shirt and plant
the flower just above his heart as you gather up
the blowzy bouquet and take his hand in yours.

Dedicated to Andrea
Copyright © 2004-2009 by the authors

July 08, 2005 in Poetry, Valentines | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack (0)

Night Bird

If some wispy evening you find yourself
among the strand of oak and knotty pine
that secrets the creek along the greenway,

should you slow your steps toward home
and stop atop the arched, wooden walking bridge
to gaze downstream to where the world began,

look for the last crimson petals of daylight
falling on the bridge's weathered, craggy railing.
There, carved with a pen knife, is your Valentine.

Run your finger across the engraved, measured notes
of the courtship song of the world's first nightingales
and you'll muse on mornings of nutmeg and cinnamon.

Trace the heart clef etched beside the courtly measures
and you'll find yourself face to face with a man. 
Handsome or not - his smile will stop the world.

He'll silence the chorus of spring peepers in the creek bed
and conduct a passing nighthawk as she rests her wings
in their rythmic beat and glides into

the dusk and before your heart beats twice, he'll taste
your lips with his.  Turn and make your steps
toward home and return him to the nightingales,

or take his hand in yours down the winding  steps that lead
to the darkling space beneath the bridge where he has gathered
the waters of the creek into a deep, shimmering, mysterious pool.


Dedicated to Elizabeth
Copyright © 2004-2009 by the authors

May 28, 2005 in Poetry, Valentines | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)

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Recent Posts

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Poetry Journals

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