Posted by Joanne in poems, Poetry
on Jan 25th, 2009 | 0 comments
I miss the glass stars we hung in the kitchen window at Christmas time, blue, orange, red, the big one in the middle with the candle. Light of the old year gone, candlewick spent. Decorations and ornaments put away the last few days of December stripping the old year bare, back to its unadorned state. The holidays are like dresses, fancy, glamorous, long and covering. Fireworks that illumine what—the year going or the one coming? We won’t know until this December 31, when the same window stars have come and gone once more and this year’s white wax is spent. ...
Posted by Joanne in poems, Poetry
on Oct 8th, 2008 | 0 comments
Afternoon comes to the valley. Sunlight steps across the terraced rice fields, casting green with gold. Dust swirls over the street as people pass by on bikes, motorcycles, busses. Horns compete. Motors clatter. Clouds drift in a long line low above the mountains. The sky lowers; hills nestle farther into themselves as the sun moves past. Somewhere between the peaks a woman squats in a doorway washing a bowl without a thought, perhaps, about what happens on the other side of the world. ...
Posted by Joanne in Everyday Life, poems, Poetry
on Jun 14th, 2008 | 2 comments
When I come home to my green yard freckled with dandelions, plentiful after the weekend’s mow when I come home to the smell of fresh spring air, faint with grass, drifting in through the window I left open all day when I come home to the dappled sunlight, hazy and light-footed, stepping in through the blinds across the bedspread when I come home with my hot cup from the tea shop kicking off my new shoes and sitting cross-legged on the bed when I see the yellow floral curtains framing the large old window when I hear fragments of bird songs, like twinkling stars, between the...
Posted by Joanne in poems, Poetry
on May 11th, 2008 | 3 comments
Just let me drive Let me breathe the honeysuckle through the open windows Let the shadows fall over the green hills Let the sun go swimming in the clouds Let there be no music but the wind’s whipping through my hair Just let me drive by the honeysuckle and breathe
Posted by Joanne in poems, Poetry
on Nov 27th, 2007 | 0 comments
The trees dripped their honey in thick layers onto the sidewalk, all a-sparkle and a-flutter in the sun and almost-wind. The parade floated by, silver with horns and music, with drummers drumming, and clowns running and splashing confetti onto delighted children. The Brooklyn Bridge raised its arms toward the sky, the Brooklyn Bridge–a temple, a palace, an architect’s dream of a boardwalk with the green river peeking through its planks. Clouds lined up above it. White boats slid underneath it. Buildings gathered round it with the trees–the trees and their glory-filled...