Sunday, February 20, 2011

Forlorn in Water


Her eyes, those of the watercolors, beheld his gaze for a brief while,
Her face the shade of alabaster, was sunlit by a red-lipped smile.

“Has she been here, have I seen her, already there in my dreams?” –
He wondered, hearing the whispers of the unsteady blowing winds.

“What is you name?” – she bowed her head ever so slightly –
“Tell me your story, tell me where you’ve been,
Did you decide to stop by flying, on top of those eternal wistful winds?”

“No, but the blowing winds unsteady, have told me you may lay ahead –“
It’s just that what with their fancy, they might have blown away instead.”

“I would have never seen the oceans, that dwell below your lovely brow,
I would have never felt the laughter, that now your wide red lips bestow.”

“Well then,” – she smiled her red-lipped smile, -- “ let’s then together flee,
The winds which carry boredom, the winds of solitude and reverie.
What do you say to that, my one and only blooming tree?”

“To run away together, from all I’ve seen and known? Well, this would be quite awful,
Although it’d feel like Dawn.”
“Would you consider staying, in my world boring, thoughtful, for a while –
“Just hover there for a little, so I could see your lovely smile?”

“Well no,” – she laughed politely, -- “where is the point to that? I thought I’d met salvation, but you’re already dead. Forgive me: I must flee now for someone else instead.”







Friday, February 18, 2011

The Daffodil



Inclined with so much grace in yellow, it fills the eye in gentle spills,
It smiles through filtered light of light winds, it is the flower daffodil.

Of  hazy cool clouds of the springtime this light and graceful sun foretells,
The promise of the gold of summer, the daffodil calls rains to dwell.

Destructible, crushed by a footstep, the flower disappears in silence,
It cannot spring up through next year, so fragile is the flower’s shyness.

Through spring it lasts and then forever, the summer’s heat destroys its leaves,
The only sign that it was there, are bulbs of roots beneath the trees.

The spring-time’s flower, head inclined, towards the soft brown earth below,
Towards the green of grass just sprouting, foretells a rest from winter’s cold.

It is no wonder then for children, to pick a daffodil or two –
The child is lovely in its sunshine, and it will find there sunshine too.

The Orange Notebook


Thoughts poured out in ink on paper, in ink so blue and black and red,
This notebook orange told a story, of one life that was seldom read.

The letters blue read times of sorrow, the letters black – a time of dread,
But letters red spoke of times happy, when life seemed like a wonderland.

The lines of read were what was there on the beginning sheets of orange book,
Then lines of blue and black so sadly appeared with a dark cold look.

Sometimes amidst the lines of sorrow appeared lines of blazing red,
They may have come from days so sour, or led for pages red ahead.

They all told stories, poems, essays, of one forgotten single soul,
That all the while lived lives of wonder, a single tail of life bestowed.

A thread of cool and glistening snow, that paved the life of this lone soul,
A thread in blue and black and red, that by no means made that life bad.

At least during the first few pages, when red was all that lay ahead.

When snow was still awaiting future, when snow had not appeared yet.

That was the story of the orange book that told a life never quite read.

Monday, February 7, 2011

The Instances of Winter


They met in circumstances of winter,
They shared beauty and their hearts,
Their secret was short-lived and tender,
Forever marred by their forbidden love.

He gave her pots of fragrant flowers,
Which she looked after in her home,
They walked in parks and circled lakes,
Their future was already gone.

A day came when amidst the flowers,
The walks in parks and circled lakes,
He bent his head towards her slightly,
And gently asked to kiss her hand.

Why not? She told him in a whisper,
Her palm already in his hand,
He touched her lips with his long finger,
And poured passion in his breath.

She laughed, amused, stroking him gently,
Do you believe in your own kiss?

I do, he said, his brown eyes swimming,
In depths of sorrow that stole bliss.

Do you remember, he asked shyly,
The day that I first saw your face?
Did it not mean to you that maybe,
I could forever love you then?

I don’t remember, she said smiling,
The way I felt for you that time –
I just remember you were beautiful,
With black hair and those shiny eyes.

He turned away, embarrassed, angry,
Too crushed to let his anger show,
He asked her: was there nothing,
That shot a feeling through your soul?

There was no feeling, she said sadly –
Only the joy of being loved,
The flattery of holding onto,
This innocent, young beating heart.

How could you hurt me, he was crying,
In this most cruel, thoughtless way –
When I adored all that touched you,
The ground that led your feet the way.

I’m sorry, she replied so sadly,
Forgive me, please, if so you can –
It’s just that I will never know,
What pots of flowers mean to men.

Release me then, tell me to leave you,
And I’ll forever go in peace;
But order me to stay and I will,
Forever be unable to resist.

I’m sorry, I cannot release you,
The woman said with her sad smile,
I love you – I just can’t fulfill you,
In what you dream I could become.
I will not dream of you tonight.

He sighed, his head hung to the ground,
He kissed her beautiful white hand,
He said: I’ll never stay with one,
Who doesn’t dream of me instead.

And so, proud and offended as he was,
He walked away into the winter landscape,
Her whole world sank, stealing her dreams,
Of loving, pain not creeping in.