bare feet
bypass blood thread,
lest Priam’s posy meet
such bellicose blade that would spread
her head!
Tag Archives: poem
First Freedoms
Zooming over armies of ants
with snacks on their backs,
touches of lunch lurch within
bursting bellies.
Freedoms found in the leisurely
revolutions of childhood’s first
and favorite escape are dreamt
of even after smooth cheeks have
turned with time.
Strawberry sugar stragglers fall
freely onto burnt bug bitten legs.
Chains of children with hamburger
hands grasp wildly for outstretched
French fry fingers, dripping limbs
without faces act as summertime
saviors.
Vivid veins flash fiercely against sooty
sky. Rich rumbles from above make
mothers mouths move impish Its and
Not Its on to protecting porches as
scents of soil rise from rose rings.
she could not say
An august owl, silent as sycamore, perched
on lofty marble throne just might, if not napping,
catch creatures of carelessness with its divine
hatchlings. Protected by tripart shields, they
detect everything which moves under moonshine.
But, Maude saw nothing behind the light–bright
sun out of synch–on that secret sleeping
road. Whether man or monster came her way,
she could not say.
One Thousand Hopes

Please burn us when dark evenings yawn.
and joyful days will surely dawn.
I recently finished folding one thousand origami cranes (known in Japan as Senbazuru) as a gift for a friend who is expecting her first child. This was my first time completing such a project. When I began the folding, my cranes looked a bit bedraggled, but after making 150 of them, I began to develop a technique.
There is a Japanese legend that says a wish will be granted to anyone who folds a thousand cranes. It is common for people to present them as gifts to family and cherished friends.
tonight we MUST fight
Between the wind and my skin lies
freedom, invisible to human eyes
but heavy on hearts.
Place me not in crow casket, shorn of flight
or of sight, for the wind is my sister and
tonight we MUST fight.
dashing dinner
There once was a cowherd from Daegu,
who liked reams of red meat in his stew.
Said his wife one warm eve
as she darned his ripped sleeve,
“tonight’s feast ran off, mooing ‘screw you!’”
—————————–
This is an older poem of mine that I came across today. My husband and I lived in Daegu, South Korea from 2012 to 2015. Daegu is pronounced “tay-goo”. The original didn’t include the anapest that is desired for the limerick form, so I am slowly working on putting it in there. This version still needs some work.
our armored borough
Deep in our burning bowl,
colorless carp writhe along
river veins, concealed under
hydrangea tears. In the
coming days, good citizens,
carved from ivory and
emerald, will be driven beneath
browning branches and into cool
corners with strawberry-butterscotch
stars swimming in their eyes. Those
who endure shall frolic in
chrysanthemum’s shadow.
The Tranquil Tiger
Rippling crystal becomes bistered and soiled,
staining learned thumbs with mud from this noble
land. Immature garnet tresses lay slumped beside
woven palm leaf, gasping for air with the fire of our
founder on their faces. They will never know the
power of their ancestors, those heaven sent messengers
with twisted fingers, blighted by warts, but which smell
of tropical winds. One quick slice and a tiger’s hide
is exposed. Stripped of black bands, the beast is tamed,
becoming a willing servant to body’s desires.
rot away
The wings
that carry us
shall rot away one day;
we shall fall if we are not taught
to fly.

dark spring runs warms
Dark night can’t hold you, not just yet,
despite this spring tide shine.
Run back inside and don’t forget
to warm that wretched wine!