Friday, January 29, 2010

The Rustic Cavalier

A huge rat hid in the woodpile behind Billy’s house,

Also magenta hued worms, multi-limbed insects, and an occasional slimy snail with petite ears

Mornings Billy and I flipped over the weathered wooden planks to wake everybody

Speculating on where the little creatures came from,

what they ate, and what they might be thinking

Transported us to enchanted ventures,

On a schooner sailing the oceans, a long shiny limousine driving to posh resorts, an airplane playing tag with the clouds

Billy had a ‘specimen cart’

On collection days we chatted about matters of moment

Where the clouds came from and their ever changing shapes and colors

and how robins knew where the worms were

Billy said I could learn about life just by watching wild things,

How they took everything in stride, just as it came, and never acted out of spite

I was six and Billy was sixty

He wasn’t very tall

He didn’t shave very often and bathed even less

He always wore a floppy old brown hat and held up his pants with a rope

My mother said he was a rustic cavalier,

But she wished I wouldn’t go on so many jaunts with him

The more charitable of our neighbors referred to him as the town eccentric

Others called him an old bum

I adored him

He taught me to spit farther than anyone else

He lit up my imagination like a Roman candle

He introduced me to philosophical musings

He drew me into the art of true conversation

He listened to me

Endnote: Revised on 2/17/10. Dedicated in loving memory to my rustic cavalier, Billy Hall.

Monday, January 25, 2010

For Metro, a Northern Perspective by P. Kavanagh

To the angry, frustrated Miss Clare

Who was cheated while buying her fare

Here’s twenty scarce dollars

To quiet your hollers

And stay the hell out of our hair


Endnote: A stunning rebuttal to my “Metro Machinations” diatribe by my favorite Canadian cousin, Paul, a true Renaissance man. I have forgiven him, of course. If Metro reads this, they will pull him out of retirement and give him an executive position.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Two Ancient Lovers

What do trees have to do with a long and happy marriage?

There is the mythic tale of Baucis and Philemon

A humble elderly couple visited by two gods in disguise

While their neighbors refused to aid the wayfarers

Philemon and his wife shared everything they had

And, the gods rewarded their kindness by granting their most cherished wish

To die together as neither could bear the loneliness of going on alone

They were transformed into two majestic trees, their branches entwining

Their transcendent metamorphosis arose from a deep and abiding love

Thus, they who waited upon the gods became gods

For what is a god, but the transforming power of love


Endnote: Dedicated to Peggy and Joe Gentile

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Metro Machinations

There was a curmudgeon named Clare
Who was cheated of her Metro fare
She shrieked I am furious
Such behavior is odious
I'll harass them until they play fair!

Endnote: Five weeks ago, a Washington, DC Metro fare machine ate my $20 and the passive aggressive employee in charge refused to assist me. After complaints to two Metro offices, the county Division of Human Rights (age/disability discrimination), and Congressman Van Hollen’s office, I finally received my money back today!

On St. Vincent's Day

On the feast of St. Vincent

The morn dawned inclement

Freezing various budding fruits

Imbibers of vino shrieked Oh No, not our juice

What a prospect, guzzling vile plebian hooch!


Endnote: January 22 is the feast of St. Vincent, patron saint of both winemakers and drunkards. Inclement weather bodes a delayed crop.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

New Moon at Midwinter

A new crescent moon

Floating across winter’s night

Resurgent sailor

Her lone sail tacking onward

Toward realms ever new

Monday, January 18, 2010

Reverend Martin Luther King Day

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly." - Martin Luther King, Junior

Endnote: Quoted today by the Charter for Compassion Group

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Winter Musings

What is it about Winter

That induces unease in some and reflection in others?

Bleaching whites, drab muted hues, denuded trees

Have become elemental

Familiar surroundings exposed as in a x-ray

The frozen desert induces introspection

Welcome guest or feared intruder?

I have learned from the wintering birds

That avoidance eventually breeds disaster

But exposure elicits un-mined resources

And trust in the Now is my probing beak


Endnote: The photo is by Jayne, blogging friend and bird photographer extraordinaire.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

January Thaw, a Tanka

A midwinter thaw

Evening’s dappled darkness

Crows drifting home

A traveler pauses

Serendipitous repose

Thursday, January 7, 2010

From Rumi

Today, like every other day,

We wake up empty 
and frightened.

Don't open the door to the study 
and begin reading.

Take down a musical instrument. 



Let the beauty we love be what we do. 


There are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground. 


Endnote: Rumi in The Book of Love: Poems of Ecstasy and Longing, translations by Coleman Barks

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

On Winter's Sun from Robert Louis Stevenson

Late lies the wintry Sun a-bed,

A frosty, fiery sleepy-head;

Blinks but an hour or two; and then,

A blood-red orange, sets again.

–Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–94)


The Early Show, a Haiku

Mesmerized cats watch
Squirrel eating her breakfast
The Early Show

Monday, January 4, 2010

January's Clarity, a Tanka

Winter’s biting air

Clarity like none other

Jolts mind and senses

A shock of recognition

Insight or grace, the same

Endnote: Photograph by Ansel Adams

Untitled Poem by J. Giorgis


children grown—
dust accumulates
on half the kitchen table

Endnote: TED KOOSER ,U.S. POET LAUREATE, 2004-2006 chose this nine-word poem by Joette Giorgis, who lives in Pennsylvania, "that is based upon noticing and then thinking about something so ordinary that it might otherwise be overlooked. Even the separate words are flat and commonplace. But so much feeling comes through!"

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Edna Ferber on Old Maidenhood

Edna Ferber: "Being an old maid is like death by drowning, a really delightful sensation after you cease to struggle.”

Friday, January 1, 2010

Blessings on New Year's Day

An old custom in the Scottish highlands is to celebrate Hogmanay with the saining, a blessing of the household and livestock. The Hogmanay custom of singing Auld Lang Syne has become traditional in many countries. Here's another old Scots song, Haste ye Back, which expresses similar sentiments:

Haste ye back, we loue you dearly,

Call again you're welcome here.

May your days be free from sorrow,

And your friends be ever near.

May the paths o'er which you wander,

Be to you a joy each day.

Haste ye back we loue you dearly,

Haste ye back on friendship's way.

Endnote: I wish you all a blessed and joy filled New Year!