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Showing posts from September, 2021

Bold Orange

 This poem came about in October 2018 (published the following year) when I drove up the street in Stratford on my way to visit Mom in the hospital. The leaves had been falling and many were still cloaked in reds and oranges. It was the orange ones that stood out that day, against the blue sky, on the ground. I can't wear orange myself, but for those who can, it conjures up the word bold . And this poem. And I think I had someone in mind when I wrote about courage. Bold Orange Bold orange colours the sky the hue of her brightness daring and courage It isn't everyday you see that kind of daring squaring with the universe and speaking of courage doing her best with what she has more than most who have more she colours the sky with her gratitude Summer 2019 Volume 68 No. 1 Tower Poetry

Autumn

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           I  remember, as a child, shuffling through piles of coloured leaves. I hear them crinkle and rustle. And then we made piles of leaves while raking them. And I suppose we might have jumped in them. As an adult, I still love that sound when I'm walking in the fall. Already in mid-September this year, leaves are turning colour. The tree across our street is almost completely turned. Most of its leaves are red. What I was thinking of when I wrote this poem was the quiet way the season changes, a bit at a time.     Autumn weaves itself into summer nights ushers in cool air the first chance it gets   It changes greens to splendid reds and yellows nips roses still in bud steals kisses from the sun whispers to migrating birds tells squirrels to fill their homes with food   Autumn slips in so quietly that it’s hard to tell just when summer ends and the season of splendour begins    This poem has also been published by Tower Poetry. Update comin

Beach Walk

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 Sadly we did not get to the beach at all this summer. With COVID and the newer variants, it just didn't happen. Still I love being at the beach, not necessarily to sit in the hot sun or swim distances which is harder to do there, and swimming is not one of my stronger skills.  I like to walk on the beach and pay attention to waves and how they creep up or crash in, and how footprints in the sand gradually disappear each time the waves come in.  Here's a poem I wrote years ago after an early morning walk on the beach at Southampton. Beach Walk Take the sandy path along the water's edge at dawn only the cry of soaring gulls and soft lapping of waves washing the golden sand seagulls rest on rock islands in the mist where a finger of land points into the lake see the treasures scattered on the beach a slice of rock remnant of nature's force fragile shells, empty of life and branches, stripped of bark and roughness sit on the rock in the quiet of dawn listen to the music of