Friday, November 27, 2009

Winter Poem(s)


Okay, so I'm working on this poem. Small tweeks here and there, but the real difference is in the endings. As the writer, I see this as simply two ways of looking at something, and both seem legitimate to me. Read on, if you like, and see what you think. (I have also posted the same thing on Lotta Torres but in separate posts.) Carol




Wintering

Carol Schiess


We’ve seen

the last hurried plunge of leaves,

swept off by an impatient wind,

leaves whose ambers, rust reds,

fuchsia pinks have heightened

the sky's bold blue

and held sunlight in the trees.


Color dies

with the passing of the leaves

and nature pushes time

into colder, briefer days.

Trees look older now,

stripped, shamed,

something pitiful revealed

in the collective reaching skyward

of frail limbs.


In winter,

a fearful presence

inhabits the lowering clouds,

waits beneath a hardened earth.

We, in that season,

are left without comfort

knowing, as we do, that

death can come

before spring.




Wintering

Carol Schiess


We’ve seen

the last hurried plunge of leaves,

swept off by an impatient wind.

Leaves whose ambers,

rust reds, fuchsia pinks

have heightened

the sky's bold blue

and held sunlight in the trees.


Color dies

with the passing of the leaves

and nature pushes time

into colder, briefer days.

Trees look older now,

stripped, shamed,

something pitiful revealed

in the collective reaching skyward

of frail limbs.


In winter,

a fearful presence

inhabits the lowering clouds,

waits beneath a hardened earth.

We, in that season,

are left without comfort,

as if, like the trees,

we have forgotten

what we always know—

that spring will come.

2 comments:

michelangelo said...

the second ending doesn't work for me.

Wendy said...

After reading the first, the second ending seems gratuituous--like you are trying to "make up" for saying something hard but true.