EverydayPoems
As a songwriter, I sometimes have thoughts or ideas that wouldn't particularly make a good song. This is the outlet for that stuff...
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
500 CDs
Reluctantly occupying the basement shelf
Thousands of songs
From groups re-grouped
And bands disbanded
Each, once the love child of the poet
And his muse
Orphaned
Pushed into obscurity like
A Wall post
Or a Christmas card
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Christmas
Candle flames dance to the music of
The Nutcracker
As I stare at the tree with its
Steady white backlight for
Antique Santas and
Glass bulbs
Colors slowly swirl
Like the spoon in my cocoa
I can sense the snow hesitating
Outside the window
And I think about how it
Came upon the midnight clear
Stars illuminating sheep-dotted hills
“
O little town of Bethlehem, how still
We see thee lie”
Silent night
Holy night
And in the shadows
The violent birth of God
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Bubble
Gliding from the wand
Full of breath
You are too fragile
Seeking equilibrium
In your short lifespan
The boundaries will pierce you
Breath will return to breath
The world is much too small
Monday, December 6, 2010
Remembering Eden
It's been too many years now
And I can't remember your face
But every once in awhile
Familiarity taps me on the shoulder
And there's a song
A laugh
That gently rustles these mental leaves
I don't know if it was spring or fall
But when I am barefoot
I feel like that's the way it was
With you
In the coolness
And all I know
Is that you can take the man out of the garden
But you can't take the garden
Out of the man
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Flea Market
So this is where my childhood ran and hid
Among the tables and tents and stalls
Our
Tip-It
game, my
View Masters
My sister's
Little Kittles
Each lunch box and baseball yearbook comes wrapped
with a memory
Like the stick of pink brittle bubble gum
In a pack of c
ollectible cards
Looked good
Smelled good
But didn't last nearly long enough
Friday, December 3, 2010
The Oak
Old and tired, he has refused to change color this year
He will not compete with the younger trees for
Attention
While they don their red and yellow sport jackets
He sheds his tattered, pale-green robe
And stands
Bare and wrinkled
Waiting for winter to dress him
In seamless white
If I Were A Poet
I would live in Vermont
I would wake early and gather my muse
Like the mist over the green hills
I would learn to like strong coffee
And turtle-necked sweaters
I would have an old Basset hound
That would lay next to the porch swing
Where I would write something melancholy
And profound
That would allow me to do it all again
Tomorrow
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