Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Glacial Dreams


    Prev Next

    

      glacial dreams

      by erik black

      Copyright 2012 by Erik Black

      www.spinningtrees.webuda.com/

      Coming soon: The Trees Were Spinning, my book on the two years I lived in Kenya.

      Coming later: The DRWN Trilogy.

      If you would like to make a copy of an individual poem for your personal enjoyment, you may if you use a fountain pen with Noodler’s ink on fine paper, as this is how I prefer to write poems. You can also send me a S.A.S.E and I will write out a poem of your choice for you. Feel free to contact me through one of the links above.

      Cover photo taken by the author of his son on the Moroccan coast.

      Introduction

      I suppose I should introduce either myself or my poetry, which often overlap. I find poetry everywhere: in the laughter of children, the blooming of flowers, the trials of life, the grace of fly fishing. Poetry is music, it is art, it is the expression of the soul. Some people say they do not get poetry, but really they haven’t read much I think. For poetry should get us.

      We were taught in school that poems should have a certain rhythm, like iambic pentameter, and always rhyme. Certainly there are great examples of this kind of poetry. But what I write is free verse, partly because I cannot rhyme well and partly because I want my poems to flow naturally and not be constrained by form. This is how I speak, so this is how I write.

      These poems were written over many years, starting when I was in college taking Poetry classes, though the majority of them were written more recently. Some poems have dates or notes under the title, but all are open to interpretation.

      I would have preferred a hand-written book of poems, to view them as they were created, but in that case only one or two people would ever have received a copy since such projects often fail for lack of time. For poets as all artists would rather be creating than editing or marketing. As such this little book from a poetaster will have to suffice for now.

      Here now are 41 poems for my 41 years.

      Erik Black

      February 2012

      glacial dreams

      (May 1, 2006)

      i dreamed a glacial dream

      immensity creaking and cracking

      on the long slow journey of time

      to the sea

      enough water for a thousand lifetimes

      unattainable, uncontainable

      i content myself with the trickle runoff

      i do not have it all

      but only enough for one glad day

      and each day my cup overflows

      love poem #10

      (for Her, whoever she might be, July 2006)

      fire and water

      breath and body

      the elements meet in this

      elemental kiss

      i stir with passion

      dreaming of Her

      yet unseen, unknown

      i sigh with passion

      and perhaps my breath

      meets Hers somewhere

      an elusive kiss

      given but not yet received

      stirring the winds of time and change

      the turning tree

      (viewed from the kitchen window my last day, May 27, 2006)

      the leaves are turning with the wind

      in the maple tree behind the neighbor’s house

      they turn from dark to light

      and return again in waves

      leaping from branch to branch

      darker green on top,

      silver light beneath

      as though the world had turned

      and we walked upon sunlight

      and looked up to shadow

      4th of July

      (2006)

      there were fireworks on the moon

      at least from where i sat on my earth

      spinning sitting by the lake water

      the brilliance of flash and boom

      made uneasy rhythm of drums on drums

      and contraction of pupils

      but i was writing of the moon

      obscured by smoke and haze

      and diminished in the intensity

      of burning gunpowder, colours on fire

      a remembrance of freedom

      won and lost and won and lost long ago

      but luna shines luminously

      ever changing, ever constant

      unaffected by our pomp and pride

      a grander and more permanent light

      than our little fires and explosions can ever make

      Silent Reverie

      (written in college after a chilly night with friends)

      i lie

      smothered in love

      and a pile of November leaves

      i dwell

      upon star clear nights

      and naked limbs

      hanging from the ground

      i fall

      and become the sky

      ethereal winds disturb my sleep

      and my collected dreams

      blow away with the leaves

      she was sleeping beauty for Halloween

      (for Eden, written Halloween 2005)

      shoes sparkling

      like ruby fireflies

      bouncing along the pavement

      and on up the hill

      to a door where treats are given

      if you know the right words

      a princess should always be polite

      she is learning,

      and a princess should have a servant

      who can carry her things

      so she can keep her skirt

      from collecting dew

      and getting stepped on

      by the ruby sparkling shoes

      and so it is,

      with her eyes and shoes sparkling

      and her golden curls bouncing,

      i follow behind her –

      keeping a respectful distance of course

      as a common servant should –

      but ever watching,

      for princesses and little girls

      are likely to grow up quickly

      when it pleases them

      leafpile

      bury me deep

      forget the world of light

      with its familiar smells and fears

      embrace the near darkness full of warmth

      and pale golden light

      and the scent of death and life

      the children laugh

      as they fill the shallow grave

      with such substance as cannot hold me

      even as the real me cannot be contained

      in this earthly heaviness,

      but the light in my soul

      lifts me out of ashen clay

      shake off the worldly cares

      like aged leaves from tall trees

      giving and taking from the leaf mould,

      joy and sorrow, decay and rebirth mingled,

      trading golden for green

      after a winter’s rest

      ember hearts

      (June 6, 1992, 2:00 A.M. the next morning, after the McElmurry’s wedding)

      i saw the moon die tonight

      an ember heart like mine

      blood red fallen through the trees

      the star were tears

      upon the deep waters

      mourning the passing of a season

      or a night

      You were there holding

      my hand and my heart

      my strength has not left

      an imprint of peace remains

      you are there where only you can be

      with me tonight

      the round wooden casket

      (D-Day February 1, 2007)

      the ring is cold and in the grave

      and i no more to be its slave

      the freedman walks with strength anew

      never again will he cho
    ose you

      willow tree

      (November 29, 2005 I drove through my old neighborhood of Chapel Woods today. Both the tree and a hollow stump I used to play in were gone, but not the memories.)

      the climbing tree is gone –

      the willow by the stream

      where three boys each

      had their own branch;

      mine was not the furthest out

      nor the nearest one,

      high enough

      to make you think before dropping,

      not that the distance really mattered

      to a boy not yet learned in algebra

      where is my climbing branch now?

      i like to imagine that it’s still there

      hanging in the sky

      bending creaking from my weight –

      only now there’s no trunk to hold it,

      only the branch in the sky

      and to reach it requires more

      than mere strength and skill

      those versed in higher mathematics

      would tell me proudly that such things

      cannot be

      to which i would reply

      what’s the good in learning

      if you forget how to dream?

      they gain the world but lose their soul

      and so my climbing branch is still there

      a place to dream and swing

      i often go there

      when i am troubled by algebras

      and rotting wood in a compost pile

      i see it clearly in my mind’s eye

      and so i know it must be

      a walk in the woods

      (with my kids in the Parkville Nature Center, August 2006)

      i saw the blackwings

      by the trickle stream

      in the humus-scented wood

      sunlight dripping through the trees

      my children are calling

      further up on the path

      come to us, hurry,

      but i linger to breathe in

      another moment

      my heart lifts a little more

      in this moment of life full of life

      i take in the woods, the water and the wild,

      and with it i am growing young

      the wet cello

      (April 21, 2007 for Deb, who played it far from my hearing)

      music from the gardens,

      the scent of rain from your cello,

      and you standing unaware of yourself

      how easily you call the Music

      as if it were yours,

      a play thing to tease and charm

      but it is we who are charmed,

      enraptured by the beauty, the sound, the scent,

      a chorus of flowers singing

      The Bronze Boar

      (to the statue on the Plaza, where we met and were engaged)

      lucky stiff

      he got to see the beginning of us

      twice

      the perfect stone

      (written in Maine)

      i told them to search for the perfect stone

      left by the waves upon the shore

      one to carry back home

      to remember evermore

      one found a heart stone

      kissed by the salty sea

      the other a rainbow rock

      discovered there by me

      but i, searching for the one stone,

      came away with three

      Penopscot Bay

      (on our visit to Maine, the islands really did seem to float)

      two girls sitting upon a rock in the waters

      two mermaids at play in the bay

      singing songs and making rhymes

      and chasing the cold away

      i walk with them, they walk and run

      two daughters on the shore

      i must keep them young in my eyes

      before they are no more

      two islands appear to float above

      the brightness of afternoon sea

      i imagine us going to them

      on a skipping stone, we three

      to Tir na nog we will go

      land of youth and light

      to islands floating on shimmering sea

      beyond the land of sight

      empty mailbox

      waiting for the letter

      never coming

      never written

      but the thoughts were written

      upon our hearts

      letters of gold leaf crinkly

      shining in the moonlight

      these thoughts i send to you

      from my state to yours

      from my heart

      golden in the morning sun

      to yours

      the last walk

      (not with any thoughts of my own, to a place in Japan)

      the forest path ended miles ago

      lost in some tangle of overgrowth or under

      my life ended years ago

      siphoned off and choked by the tangles of life

      the compass doesn’t work here either

      in this forest of silent trees

      Aokigahara

      i am alone

      or worse than alone

      my companions the dim spirits lost long ago

      Yurei

      we stumble on together, lost and found

      in this wilderness of life and death

      coming to the end at last

      will i become faint like them?

      fading finally out of this dim life

      into the dark unknown

      nights in Fes medina

      the obcene call wakes me

      three hours before the dawn

      “God is great!”

      yes, i agree with that part

      but do you have to shout it so loudly

      so early in the morning?

      this foul beast of an alarm clock

      ancient chant in an ancient tongue

      and now my daughter’s year-old cry

      to join in the chaos

      a thousand and one nights

      a thousand and one minarets

      each one striving to be the loudest

      but the one closest to us has them all beat

      i imagine him climbing the steps

      so early in the morning dark

      going to the very top of the minaret,

      but this time he stumbles and falls,

      too weak to wake me tonight;

      or perhaps he swallowed a date

      that went down the wrong way

      and so lodged in his throat,

      not enough to choke, but

      oh-i-am-sorry-you-will-be-in-bed- a-month

      and for that month we sleep in peace

      la la salama

      but no, it shall be my bane

      for every night in Fes,

      ancient city of an ancient people

      my home for a thousand and one nights

      i do not have power to crumble the minarets

      but i do have the power

      to calm my crying baby girl

      and each night we walk the tiled floors

      together

      there is much comfort for us both in this

      sleeping with my shoes on

      (from an article on NPR March 1, 2011 about the dangers in Somalia)

      some think me strange

      say I’d have more peace

      with bare feet

      poking through the holes

      in my thin blanket

      but here there is no peace

      not even for those with two blankets

      every night the same

      rat tat tat

      gunfire in the next village

      how soon will they be here?

      when it’s time to run

      you have no time

      grab the photo

      and run for your life

      that’s why I’m sleeping with my shoes on

      someday dreams

      (October 27, 2011)

      i will have a garden someday

      flowers, herbs and a rabbit to chase a
    way

      i will sow the seeds

      and reap the bounty,

      will see the harvest

      i have children today

      they take so much time

      that my garden languishes

      weeds and rabbits have chased away

      my bountiful harvest

      come again another day

      i will have a farm someday

      an acre of wheat,

      a field of beans

      chickens, ducks and geese

      to chase the blues away

      i sow my seed and reap the bounty

      sickle and scythe cutting low to the ground

      i have children now

      they take the time and money

      i was saving for my farm

      but they are my bountiful harvest

      i have sown and i will reap

      and they will outlast any earthly harvest

      and fill every need with joy

      the bee walk

      taking the bee walk

      on a lazy afternoon

      to the secret apiary

      where gold awaits me

      the unwanted passenger

      (to one still unfound)

      i didn’t invite you in

      i didn’t even know you

      driving to work in the fast lane and

      whoa! there you are

      touching my leg, i’m

      brushing you away

      now searching for something to hit you with

      and you all coy

      with your eight spindly legs

      scrambling under my seat

      running away like the coward you are

      friends close

      and enemies closer

      but this is too much

      are you watching waiting

      in some dark crumby crevice

      or has the darkness taken you?

      perhaps had we met on some

      green lawn in the summer sun

      we could have been friends

      but not now, not ever now

      i think it time to get a new car

      the holy fly line

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026