Trial Season
Only yesterday
earth was cut-away layers
of browned forgotten bloom,
the tired slog going on.
But things happen.
Images run together
quickly.
Winter slinks away,
slow, like an old man
making do with a gimp left leg.
Spring starts up
a widespread yellow operation
dressed for the challenge,
armed with emerald swords.
Tiny eruptions
surround themselves
with unclaimed crowns,
circles of fire.
It's a mystery mixing you up.
One day the wind shakes out pollen,
smuggled gold, gods of love;
the next, glimmers of honey, shimmering bronzes,
the colors of light in the south of France.
Summer just as soon changes heart,
waves colors like an invader his banners
before committing suicide
on a city sidewalk in front of you.
Unbuttoned buds turn scarlet
small and round and infectious
in the hand invited to touch
small and round and viral,
a violet more intense than blood
on the hand squeezed with passion.
You think,
this is no big secret
this yellow to blue to red
then again to red.
You think what you like most is
the sureness of it,
how you can count on it
coming back
like a lover you've argued with.
Copyright Maureen E. Doallas. All Rights Reserved.
Monday, October 26, 2009
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2 comments:
The visual imagery in this poem, especially the colors, is truly fine: widespread yellow operation, emerald swords, glod, honey, bronzes -- it's all like a feast of color.
the changes of season always feel like spring in my heart. there is new life in each one.
lovely.
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