10.4.11

Yours Forever


A long list of my day:
Showers in the morning. Syrupy sweet sunshine. Zephyrs. Birdsong. Iced Tea. New Books (I love libraries!). A librarian who likes ee Cummings. New Music. Films. Salvador Dali. Sun-dappled new green leaves. Sun roof open, windows down. Bikes. Sundresses. Spring.
Spring.
Everyday should be as such.
Bliss.
On a serious level.

April.
It just got awesome.

Summary:
The First Night of Spring
-

Sherbet sunset

In a dwindling ear before

The cacophonous symphonies

Of springtime night creatures.

We listen to the soft drumming of

Frogs in the mirroring pond.

-

A magnetic draw to the

The sailboat-esque waves.

An April day in remembrance.

A lesson in the art of listening.

To the soft lilt in the wind's speech,

His sweet words heated, and blown into my ear,

Onto the necks of the sweat-clad flowering blooms.

-

The water painted with the last rays of purpling

Sunlight, farewell and good-night, we wave.

The newly born creatures make newly-born sounds

That play so soothingly, after six months

In the dark underground

Of winter, like the heavy hand of Demeter herself

Plunged us into the earth.

-

But now, again, Persephone brings us up, up

And brings the flowers' smiling heads up, up

The soil parts and breathes deep, gasping breaths

Of this new sugar-sweet, heavy zephyr song.

Night sings once again

In sweet harmony, like it never had ceased

At all, never had died in the months

Before this great thaw.

-

Painted, the sky seems

In velveted color of crushed space,

The stars shine like streetlamps

Which now sleep far later into the eve.

Before flicking among the firefly bodies

Soon to alight and gorge themselves

On the dizzyingly sensual night,

Calm embrace of warmer months.

-

Spring breaks forth on torrents

Of these syrup-heavy Western Winds

Who blow sleep into our eyes

On the petals of the newborn flowers,

The crocuses reach their arms forth

Like tendrilled children.

-

Our eyes fall into deep slumber

With windows flung open

Our lives flung open to air

Out on the clothesline

And to soak in this sundried

Sweet breeze

And to sing with the

Night's own low hum.


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