spring ~
quaking woodhammering & then
sprinkling rain
spring ~
quaking woodhammering & then
sprinkling rain
Estas dos semanas pasadas hubía habido festivales de cerezos en Seattle, por en vez de tomar un autobús hasta ellos hice excusas porqué no podría ir, incluye dolores de espalda, un malo cielo de sueño que me hacía despertar demasiado tarde, “malo” clima, — ¡como si la lluvia hubía empeorado cualquier parte de la naturaleza alguna vez! — cansancio en un larga semana de trabajo, o simplemente ser demasiado ocupado.
shivering
shrouded ’neath gray skies
cherryblossoms
late night work ~
the quiet chatter
light spring rain
spring
& the sun arrives
& the black firs
shine green
& their arms
begin to sway
& the gray clouds break
& reveal the sky’s
deep blue underbelly
& the bellowing wind
& the yawning airplanes
are ripped open
with the sounds o’ squawking chatter
& slamming car doors
standing hunched
on the wet grass
year’s 1st squirrel
i hear up
an early spring fir
obscured chirps
gray weekend ~
e’en the fir’s head
is slumping
cobalt march ~
mornfog fades in
afternoon rain
early march ~
the mower growls ’wake
green scents
<it’s been weeks since the last haiku.
you’d better keep feeding the wall
if you don’t want the mammonth to ’scape…>.
<something’s not right…>.
<look outside for once:
look @ the crisp frost on the grass,
the chalkwhite roofs>.
<no, no, no. it’s all wrong.
it’s march.
frosty february, fine;
but by march, spring has officially begun.
i love the frost, don’t get me wrong,
but e’erything has to go @ its right time,
& e’eryone knows march
is the time for the frost to get lost
& the birds to return>.
<You were happy a few years ago
when it outright snowed in march.
¿remember?
you were so pissed that the weather
squandered a covid-enclosed year
when few should be driving their cars
without leaving any snow,
& then as a last-second surprise,
march marched in & saved the year
with such a bounty o’ snow
several inches high
that lasted for o’er a week.
¿do you remember?>.
<yes, that was a saving grace,
but while march snow can feed the desperate,
it’s no match for december snow.
i don’t e’en remember
what i did with that march snow.
¿but the december snows?
with the mocha mint teas,
the peanut-butter fudge,
the red & green lights e’erywhere,
the weeks off from work,
wasted wasting dinosaurs in the eastern forest
or reading marcel proust…>.
<you still had that last year.
¿have you forgotten the wisdom of olde?
frosty march doesn’t spend december snow>.
<¿but what ’bout the mossy trees,
their leaves plump & green,
the grass flushing green
under torrents o’ rain?
the leaves,
the weeds,
the vines & ivy,
the brambles
& inedible berries…
¿do you remember?
i look outside my window
& see the firs are black,
backed by iron-pale cloud miasma.
don’t like the look of it,
don’t like the taste of it,
don’t like the smell of it,
i want to watch it come down>.
<you are the 1 with short memory.
¿does not march march on slowly?
¿have you already forgotten
our lord, october march?>.
<but we’re talking ’bout december march, here…>.
<& january march
& february march
& september march
& november march,
& soon there will be
april march,
may march,
june march,
july march,
& august march.
the month is still young…>.
but the poet & their inner demons’ convo was interrupted
by the arrival o’ a big, white seagull.