Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Aestivation's End

 
Summer Night, 1913, by Albert Bloch


Vetr and his daughters
step out of their summer chalets,
yawn, stretch,
exchange nods across the valleys
and begin to descend.

They tiptoe and stomp,
gracefully glide or slump down to rest,
leaving a touch of frost here,
early snow there,
across the autumnal landscape.

They may admire the warm-hued leaves
or pity the farmer's harvest,
and spare their chilling touch
for a while.  They may not. 

But they walk along,
change drifting in their wake
as they go south
for the winter.



Aestivation: dormancy during periods of heat and drought
Vetr: Old Norse for Winter

Monday, August 27, 2012

Northwest August

 
Big Room, 1948, by Andrew Wyeth
 
Open windows wide
let soft breezes warm the house
soak up dazzling beams
leave the fire unlit until
clouds prevail and sun retreats
 
 
 

Thursday, August 9, 2012

The Dining Room of Discontent


A Dinner Table at Night, 1884, John Singer Sargent


Persephone sets her glass down, and sighs. Her husband steals a quick glance at her, then hides behind his newspaper.

She sighs again, more loudly. "I need a change."

"You just returned from visiting your mother. You can't leave again so soon."

"No, of course not. I was thinking of redecorating."

"Hmm." Pluto tries to focus on the stock market reports. "Gold is down again."

"This red and black color scheme is so sinister. Appropriate for a bachelor pad, I suppose, but I'd like to lighten things up." She pulls out a catalog, and turns to a dog-eared page. "I was thinking of azure for the walls, or perhaps cerulean."

Pluto sets the newspaper in his lap. "What?"

"Men. You have no sense of color. See, they're right here." She points to two blocks of color on the page.

"Blue?"

"Yes, either azure or cerulean. Royal would be a bit much, don't you think?" She shows him other pages, gathering momentum. "Then we'd need a new rug. Either amber or fescue would work. Let's replace the wall sconces and these dreary little lamps with a nice central ceiling fixture--maybe this one with the rounded alabaster cover. Something nice and bright, anyway. I'd like to have the hearth cleaned, and put an arrangement of silk flowers there. We really don't need a fire, you know. It makes this room hotter than, well, the rest of Hades."

"Ah." Pluto raises an eyebrow. "Sky blue. Amber waves of grain. You want this place to be more like--"

"Home, yes."

"--your mother's home. Well, you live in my home now, and I like it this way." He pages back through the catalog. "If it makes you feel any better, you may refer to the color scheme as, er, sable and," he winks, "pomegranate."

Persephone winces. She looks down at the table for a moment. Pluto picks up his paper and turns to the sports section.

"Very well."

"Oh, look. There's a new record in the discus throw," Pluto comments, relieved at her acquiescence.

His wife looks up again. "However, I absolutely insist on new window treatments."

"Sorry?"

She walks over to one of the covered windows. "These are so flat and common. When you open them, they fly up with such a vulgar snap." She shudders. "Draperies are much more fashionable, and everyone knows it."

He lowers the newspaper. "I had no idea--"

"Everyone else knows." She sits again, holding her face in her hands. "I've heard what the staff call me. And it is spreading. Everywhere I go in your realm, I hear the whispers, mocking me."

Pluto leans forward, takes one of her hands in his. "My dear, if my subjects are treating you with anything less than respect, I shall know what to do about it. But I have not heard any such rumors." His eyes drop to the catalog. "You say they are calling you--"

Persephone only sniffs again, watching as her husband's puzzled brow clears.

"Would you rather be called the Duchess of Draperies?" he asks, with half a smile.

She gives him a small nod.

"Or perhaps the Countess of Curtains? The Viscountess of Valances?" Pluto releases her hand, leans back in his chair, and laughs. It is Persephone's turn to be puzzled. She has never heard him laugh so heartily.

Finally his laughing subsides. He wipes tears from his eyes with a black handkerchief, then takes her hand again. "Do what you like with the windows, my love. But no matter how you cover them, it is your destiny to be the Queen of Shades."

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Pachydrama


A Magpie Tale

The Circus With the Yellow Clown, 1967, Marc Chagall

Given the choice between
bread and a circus I'll
favor the pastry a-
bove any clown,

un-

less there are elephants,
gigantenormously
dressed in their finery,
coming to town.

********

I just discovered the
form "double dactyl" and
had to attempt it for
this weekly poem.

Hard as I tried it's one
syllable over.  Think
you can do better?  Then
try it at home!

Monday, April 30, 2012

Too Little Prince


image by Manu Pombrol


". . . and when someone reads my message in a bottle, I hope he
will have the strength of will to climb back out and rescue me."

Argh!  Too slippery!




Sunday, April 1, 2012

Nesting




stress, confusion reign
come to the beginning place
shelter from the storm
remember the truth you knew
find your wings and fly again

Thursday, March 29, 2012

The Queen's First Mirror




Magic Mirror, on the wall,
Who's the fairest one of all?
With more extensive face than most,
Of my own beauty I must boast.

Magic Mirror, in my hand,
Who's the smartest in the land?
For cranial capacity,
No one can compare with me.

Magic Mirror, on the floor,
Who is strongest, at the core?
More potent than a lightning flash,
I--careful with that hammer--
Smash!

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

To the Shoppers, To Make Much of Dimes

with apologies to Robert Herrick



Gather ye soup cans while ye may;
according to the flyer,
the price that seems so low today,
tomorrow will be higher.



Do you keep a stock of food for emergencies? 
The smart folks at Food Storage Made Easy can show you how!

You may also like this market moment from a year ago.

Happy Leap Day!

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Pay Phone




Bill Collins rode his bike down the trail.  It had been a tough ride, but he was nearly to the home stretch when a flash of light caught his eye.  He slowed down and took a swig of tepid water from his bottle.  The late afternoon sun reflected off the glassy side of a phone booth.

You don't see those much anymore, he thought, taking another drink.  The booth was a good reminder, though.  He should probably let his wife know he was on the way. 

Bill pulled his cell phone out of his pocket, and his fingers went through the motions, but nothing happened.  The battery was dead.  When he replaced the phone, he felt something else in his pocket and pulled it out.  A quarter. 

Mom had always warned him to take a quarter along when he went out, just in case he needed to call.  These days he carried his own phone everywhere, but he still followed her advice.  For good luck?  He didn't know. 

He wondered how much pay phones cost these days.  Everything else was more expensive than it had been when he was a kid.  He swung down his kickstand, and stepped into the booth. 

"Local calls - 25¢"

"How about that?" he muttered.  Dropping his coin into the slot, he dialed quickly.  Only after he'd pressed the last digit did he realize that he'd dialed the only number he had ever called from a pay phone--his childhood home.

Telephone companies had come and gone, but Mom and Dad had held onto that phone number for years.  Of course, it had been disconnected after Mom's funeral.  Bill waited for the recorded message to tell him that the number was not in service.  He couldn't hang up.  Mother had been very strict about that.

"If you dial a wrong number, you must apologize.  Never hang up without speaking.  That's just rude."

From telephone manners to table manners, Mom had drilled him on every form of etiquette.  He'd done a lot of eye-rolling over her proper ways.  Still, he knew that courtesy had earned him his job, and gallantry had won his wife.  He'd never told his mother how much he appreciated her lessons.  What would he give for one last conversation with her?  That would be worth far more than a quarter.

As the dull ring tone droned in his ear, Bill closed his eyes and envisioned the big black rotary phone jangling on the wall, remembered the way he would drag a stool beneath it, lift the heavy receiver, and answer--

"Collins residence."  A child's voice cut through his reverie. 

Bill's eyes snapped open.  "Really?"  Collins is not an uncommon name, he thought, but it's funny that another Collins family has been assigned the same number.  Bill wondered if it was done alphabetically.

"Whaddaya want?"  The kid interrupted his thoughts again.

"Oh, I'm sorry.  May I speak with your mother or father?"

"Dad's not home yet, and Mom's powdering her nose."

Bill chuckled.  That was the same excuse his mother had trained him to give when she was out of the house.  He'd asked her once if it counted as a lie.  She primly declared it a "euphemism."  That shut him up.  It was a long time before he found that word in the dictionary.

"Do you wanna leave a message?"

"Yes, please."  Bill rattled off his cell phone number.  "And the name is William Collins."

"Is not!  That's my name!  Stupid crank caller." 

"But--"  Too late.  The boy had hung up.

Bill leaned against the cool glass of the phone booth as a wave of dizziness washed over him.  He suddenly remembered having the same conversation, some forty years before.

His mother had been in the powder room, freshening up before Dad came home for dinner.  When she emerged, she asked about the phone call.

"It was just a prank, Mom.  Some guy who said he had my name."

Mom smoothed the crumpled message paper.  "It's an unusual phone number," she said thoughtfully.  "Still, it would be rude to not return the call."

Over his protests, she'd dialed, listening patiently to the rings of a phone that did not yet exist. 

Bill stared at his dead cell phone, willing it to work just for a moment.  Nothing happened.  He shoved it back into his pocket, then mounted his bike and pedaled home with renewed vigor.

He had some things to tell his wife, before it was too late.

Friday, January 6, 2012

Renew


River, Marina Moevs, 2005

The bright winter feasts
can be finicky beasts
with pleasing traditions of give and take
the hurry and flurry of requisite cheer

When the glitter and flash
turn to litter and trash
pause to reflect in the clear, still lake
and breathe in a soft green new year