by Lynda Lambert
lyrical songs
mingle through foggy layers
abandoned nests
hidden among wet branches
mulberry trees without tender berries
Hatagoya's Desk
▼
Sunday, October 29, 2017
Desert Rain
by Ann Hunkins
Seven nights of rain in the high desert.
Steam puffs off flowering chamisa,
woody apache plume, curled gramma grass.
Even the shattered granite softens
to take raccoon and squirrel tracks.
A Townsend¹s Solitaire rises through sunlight
wing flutter flash, catch and release brilliance.
Dark side of the hill cold. Sun slips through valleys,
lights up tops of two tall ponderosas, candles.
The warm side slopes up in bright red soil
toward clothed mountains, needles silver with rain,
mist in the hollows, juniper berries shining sapphire.
No one here complains about the wet.
Seven nights of rain in the high desert.
Steam puffs off flowering chamisa,
woody apache plume, curled gramma grass.
Even the shattered granite softens
to take raccoon and squirrel tracks.
A Townsend¹s Solitaire rises through sunlight
wing flutter flash, catch and release brilliance.
Dark side of the hill cold. Sun slips through valleys,
lights up tops of two tall ponderosas, candles.
The warm side slopes up in bright red soil
toward clothed mountains, needles silver with rain,
mist in the hollows, juniper berries shining sapphire.
No one here complains about the wet.
Forest-hope
by Thriveni C. Mysore
Raging wild-fire swept
through sun-burnt forest.
Seven dawns passed through
smoky air that carried
stifled scared cries of
insects, birds and beasts.
Hurried raindrops fell
to sooth sprouts.
a chirp, a song, a growl
promised the coming of
fertile, New-life.
Raging wild-fire swept
through sun-burnt forest.
Seven dawns passed through
smoky air that carried
stifled scared cries of
insects, birds and beasts.
Hurried raindrops fell
to sooth sprouts.
a chirp, a song, a growl
promised the coming of
fertile, New-life.
Saturday, October 28, 2017
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
In Constantinople
by Margarita Serafimova
Allah is calling the parakeets
to pass over the grass,
and they are passing,
greener than light.
Allah is calling the parakeets
to pass over the grass,
and they are passing,
greener than light.
Sunday, October 22, 2017
The Horned Lark’s Song
by Pepper Trail
This is what we want
The short grass
Poverty
Drought
The hard horizon, all around
Here we know where we are
At the center
Here, nothing else
At the center
This is what we want
The short grass
Poverty
Drought
The hard horizon, all around
Here we know where we are
At the center
Here, nothing else
At the center
Wednesday, October 18, 2017
Hinge Breach
by Rachel Barton
someone’s taken the door off the hinges wind
howls and wails against the open walls leaves
and grit flail and scritch in a scatter of eddies across
open floorboards across the valley at least the rain
clings to distant mountains and coast we make
the most of joists creaking dryly in the yawn of open air
dry creek bed of our brains threatens flames
everywhere the in is out we want to shout
enough but the cotton in our mouths
thwarts our tongues’ longings our eyes
red with the assail of grit grow weary
doors unhinged all barriers are permeable
openness an assault and a wonder
radioactive boars defy containment
run wild around Fukushima
we are scatter shot to the stars
someone’s taken the door off the hinges wind
howls and wails against the open walls leaves
and grit flail and scritch in a scatter of eddies across
open floorboards across the valley at least the rain
clings to distant mountains and coast we make
the most of joists creaking dryly in the yawn of open air
dry creek bed of our brains threatens flames
everywhere the in is out we want to shout
enough but the cotton in our mouths
thwarts our tongues’ longings our eyes
red with the assail of grit grow weary
doors unhinged all barriers are permeable
openness an assault and a wonder
radioactive boars defy containment
run wild around Fukushima
we are scatter shot to the stars
Sunday, October 15, 2017
Ponderosa
by Carl Mayfield
Bark is the only
bite offered.
The pine sucks
the earth
into its trunk,
rising
moment by moment
into the sky
where the
three needle
clusters
meet the wind.
Bark is the only
bite offered.
The pine sucks
the earth
into its trunk,
rising
moment by moment
into the sky
where the
three needle
clusters
meet the wind.
In the Forest
by Elizabeth Burnside
I
Water seeps
up, enough pools,
until dribbling, gurgling,
falling water forms
water falling,
gurgling, dribbling,
until pools enough,
up seeps water.
II
Pollen falling
with golden
leaves beneath
still wet streams,
glistening moss slakes
creek, slakes moss, glistening
streams wet still,
beneath leaves
golden with
falling pollen.
III
Lofting trees
now dormant, trunks
fallen into slopes,
lacing streams
amongst layered decay,
nascent decay
layered amongst streams
lacing slopes into
fallen trunks, dormant
now, trees lofting.
I
Water seeps
up, enough pools,
until dribbling, gurgling,
falling water forms
water falling,
gurgling, dribbling,
until pools enough,
up seeps water.
II
Pollen falling
with golden
leaves beneath
still wet streams,
glistening moss slakes
creek, slakes moss, glistening
streams wet still,
beneath leaves
golden with
falling pollen.
III
Lofting trees
now dormant, trunks
fallen into slopes,
lacing streams
amongst layered decay,
nascent decay
layered amongst streams
lacing slopes into
fallen trunks, dormant
now, trees lofting.
Saturday, October 14, 2017
Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Saffron
by Don Thompson
Smoke from distant wildfires
creates the illusion of clouds—
of faux cumulonimbus
offering rain like those promises of peace
that no one falls for.
And behind its pall this morning,
the sun glows almost saffron
as if to honor a self-immolated monk
who died for
some long forgotten lost cause.
The fires will keep burning for miles,
for days; and years from now,
driving by, we’ll see snags
like blackened skeletons
still standing upright in the new growth.
Smoke from distant wildfires
creates the illusion of clouds—
of faux cumulonimbus
offering rain like those promises of peace
that no one falls for.
And behind its pall this morning,
the sun glows almost saffron
as if to honor a self-immolated monk
who died for
some long forgotten lost cause.
The fires will keep burning for miles,
for days; and years from now,
driving by, we’ll see snags
like blackened skeletons
still standing upright in the new growth.
Sunday, October 8, 2017
gorilla rain
by Elizabeth Kuelbs
he knuckles around his cage around
the tub it smells of plastic it smells
of rain that wets bamboo nests
somewhere he would eat ants from
his lovers’ and his babies’ faces where
he would thunder dirt where he
would tremble forests it smells
real
he climbs into
cool wet
he claps splashes stretches
his great arms stormwide he
spins he
spins and spins
his own rain and he
is he is he
his eyes on a
somewhere sky
he knuckles around his cage around
the tub it smells of plastic it smells
of rain that wets bamboo nests
somewhere he would eat ants from
his lovers’ and his babies’ faces where
he would thunder dirt where he
would tremble forests it smells
real
he climbs into
cool wet
he claps splashes stretches
his great arms stormwide he
spins he
spins and spins
his own rain and he
is he is he
his eyes on a
somewhere sky
Diamond Beach Glow
by Maria DePaul
Breakers hit the black sand of Diamond Beach
Dust of volcanoes sparkles with chips of icebergs
The surf glows with the scattered frozen jewels
Clear glass of ancient tundra broken apart
Burnished by the waves clear against the
Brilliant blue of waters under a rainbow dawn
Each facet and flaw of these random ice floes
Sparkles in Arctic tides battered by heavy rains
Frosted, transparent or mirrorlike, floaters reflect
Every nearby glow of light bouncing on the waves
Breakers hit the black sand of Diamond Beach
Dust of volcanoes sparkles with chips of icebergs
The surf glows with the scattered frozen jewels
Clear glass of ancient tundra broken apart
Burnished by the waves clear against the
Brilliant blue of waters under a rainbow dawn
Each facet and flaw of these random ice floes
Sparkles in Arctic tides battered by heavy rains
Frosted, transparent or mirrorlike, floaters reflect
Every nearby glow of light bouncing on the waves
Saturday, October 7, 2017
Wednesday, October 4, 2017
Italian Naturalist's Diary
by Terrence Sykes
olive & fig
then chestnuts
amongst
peeling birch
guarding that
silent river
olive & fig
then chestnuts
amongst
peeling birch
guarding that
silent river
Sunday, October 1, 2017
On Fernandina
by Elizabeth Kuelbs
There is still
suspended
between
celestial light
sparked breaths ago
and the slow wet rock
that holds life from fire
a seal who sleeps with
squid in the mouth
her agouti fur alive
with quick-tongued
lizards who dance
death to the flies
who would
sting her
until they
too surrender
cool-skinned
to sun.
There is still
suspended
between
celestial light
sparked breaths ago
and the slow wet rock
that holds life from fire
a seal who sleeps with
squid in the mouth
her agouti fur alive
with quick-tongued
lizards who dance
death to the flies
who would
sting her
until they
too surrender
cool-skinned
to sun.
"The wolves who drink snow pass in spring"
by Margarita Serafimova
The wolves who drink snow pass in spring,
one by one, through the forest under the ridge, keeping to the high,
an unconditional look in the eye, knowing who they are.
The wolves who drink snow pass in spring,
one by one, through the forest under the ridge, keeping to the high,
an unconditional look in the eye, knowing who they are.
Just A Bird
by Don Thompson
The owl has flown infinite distances
and for eons to get here,
somewhere close by in the dark.
If you could see it, you’d recognize
your own fear caught in its eyes
like an insect in amber.
You’ve felt talons seize your wrist
in a bad dream;
waited all night for the beak;
and heard the owl call softly—
low notes like an angel of Apocalypse
warming up his shofar
The owl has flown infinite distances
and for eons to get here,
somewhere close by in the dark.
If you could see it, you’d recognize
your own fear caught in its eyes
like an insect in amber.
You’ve felt talons seize your wrist
in a bad dream;
waited all night for the beak;
and heard the owl call softly—
low notes like an angel of Apocalypse
warming up his shofar