Amidst the falling berries and cherry leaves
You curl into a tight black globe
Of winter lethargy
And shuffle a pelt-warm dream
Of open fields, larger family and aplenty.
Along with raccoon dogs, skunks and chipmunks,
You hide in dark inaccessible places
To let nature die of predatory instincts,
And unmindful of the snow and wind
Slumber till early spring into a vision realized.
This poem was first published in the Poetic Portal, February 19,2009. To read this poem in the original published format or browse other poems by Mukesh Williams please visit the website Poetic Portal.net
The blog deals with poetry, philosophy, methodologies and literary theories. Formerly of St. Stephen's College, Professor Williams is a UNESCO Poet, listed in the World Poetry Directory, Marquis Who's Who in the World, UK Who's Who 2010, the Encyclopedia of Indian Writers in English and selected as one of the 2000 Outstanding Intellectuals of the 21st Century 2010, IBC Cambridge England and International Advisor to MELUS. He teaches at Soka University and Keio-SFC, Japan.
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Monday, February 16, 2009
Wild Grass
The amber softness and
The figural logic
Of the wild autumn grass,
Sway gently in the night wind,
Divesting conviction and emotion,
Leaving a yearning for the imponderable.
Its bewitching long aureate wings
Reify symbols, concepts, philosophies,
Challenging in their audacity
Even the dusty gold of the moon
That spreads its gilded icons
In a bewildered expanse of eidolon.
First published in Best Poem: A Poetry Journal, January 26, 2009
To read more poems by Mukesh Williams please go to The Copperfield Review and Best Poem: A Poetry Journal by accessing the following websites http://www.copperfieldreview.com and http://bestpoem.wordpress.com/
The amber softness and
The figural logic
Of the wild autumn grass,
Sway gently in the night wind,
Divesting conviction and emotion,
Leaving a yearning for the imponderable.
Its bewitching long aureate wings
Reify symbols, concepts, philosophies,
Challenging in their audacity
Even the dusty gold of the moon
That spreads its gilded icons
In a bewildered expanse of eidolon.
First published in Best Poem: A Poetry Journal, January 26, 2009
To read more poems by Mukesh Williams please go to The Copperfield Review and Best Poem: A Poetry Journal by accessing the following websites http://www.copperfieldreview.com and http://bestpoem.wordpress.com/
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