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A Thought for Today
Until someone offers you something better than your
big dream, don't give up on it.

I'm still attempting to recover my hard drive (it went down at the beginning of the week thanks to a virus both Ken and I downloaded last weekend.) Meanwhile here are 3 poems from the 1972 album "Winter.
THREE WINTER POEMS
A Fist Full of Snow
I need familiars
your bowels and brains have to be
as sure for me as both your eyes.
Passing through the sheets
and climbing down inside of you -
even though
you give back one for one
and maybe more
I sometimes wonder if I haven't
Traversed or gone climbing down a shaft
so new that none, not even me
had charted it.
Did you take a turn that I missed?
Did I go somewhere else ?
Was there a curve we didn't
go around together? Worse -
has someone else been hiking
down your highway?
Not to worry, never mind
change is change
unaccountable but surprising
if you like surprises.
It's just that I had hoped
all our surprises
would be together - planned.
There is some silence now
like dead wood in the forest
moving only when it's prodded.
And I stand here waiting
with a fist full of snow.
-from "Come to me in Silence," 1973
& "Too Many Midnights," 1981
Laughter Through the Crystal
Not so much for safety as for peace
do I retreat into imagination.
Retreat might be the wrong word
my mind's people take me forward.
Still... imagination's devices
do the needed job
when you're not here,
when no one's here.
Just now I've been awakened
by the screeching of mad bluejays.
The coffee isn't ready
the morning paper
won't arrive
for one more hour.
No need to even think.
The Morse code of coffee perking
in this room
now occupied by only me says it all
like laughter through the crystal.
-from "Too Many Midnights," 1981
Snowflakes in the Wine
It rained today, all day
everything was the sound of rain.
Children laughing in the streets
police whistles
cars splashing mud at one another
even the music on the radio
sounded like the rain.
Tonight the storm is nearly over.
I walked down by the railway station
to watch the trains come in
and not once was I asked the time
nor did a stranger stop and want a light.
Sometimes on rainy nights
I forgot I'm in a foreign country.
It's about twelve-thirty now.
Most everyone has gone to bed.
Something is pushing me,
making me think.
I miss you.
-from "Winter," 1972
All three poems appeared in the 1972 album
"Winter," in slightly different form.
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NINETEEN FIFTY-NINE: TRUE HOLLY |
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Because I love the sound of bells
I haunt the churchyards all year long
no matter where I might be traveling.
Because true holly makes me smile
I wait for Christmas just like children,
and I wait for children too.
Because September travels slow
I catch it when I can
and hold it over for another month or two.
Because this year I'm poor again
I've written you another Christmas poem
made with last year's love and next year's too.
-from "Twelve Years of
Christmas", 1969 |