The Builder’s Mark

The tower built, the waters flow 
The names and faces we don't know 
Upon the earth, the builder's mark 
While we to other voices hark 

Celebrities, inanities, 
The evening late urbanities 
The dreamed-of, over-made-up kiss 
Yet waters flow 

In spite of this

the Chase

We watched her set her heart on things 
That seemed, each day, to grow more far; 
The blessèd weeks stretched out to years 
Like running towards the evening star. 

The chase, the goal, the destiny: 
The journey set, the route in flux -- 
But it's not hope out on the Chase 
But cynicism that 

Corrupts

A March Quartet (IV)

DEATH will have its night; Life will have its day. 
 This is the world we're born into, this is the mortal way,
 
AS FLOWERS feel the sun despite the vast all-over cold -- 
 We're born to live, to learn, to feel, and maybe, to get old, 

WHEN WE must put our petals down, and give in to the earth;
 For death will have its night, and day will have its birth.

A March Quartet (III)

THERE'S ONE DAY cold, the next day warm, 
 The Spring, capricious in its whim; 
  The child runs and plays in snow, 
   Then sees a next when all will swim
   In streams and pools of sunny March,
  Beside green fields of Summer-soon:
 There's one day white, the next day green; 
It's all a ludicrous cartoon.

THE FIELD, it beckons to the young, 
 And to the old, the in-between; 
  But soon the wind will keening come, 
   And gray and white will cover green. 
   There is a rhythm, mad and great, 
  That all must learn and feel to know 
 We think that we're in charge, when we 
Are just part of the ebb and flow.

A March Quartet (II)

THE TRULY different, we forgive, 
 the almost-alike, our enemies; 
We formulate cases in our labs 
  to spread biotic crop disease, 

But where those crops won't grow, we find 
 a breeze, a shore, a sunny way; 
The truly different live in peace, 
 The almost-alike must rue the day.

A March Quartet (I)

THE WIND blows hollow, from the South; 
 The mind shrinks back in wondering -- 
   Yours was the waiting, Winter heart, 
   Somnolent hopes, all slumbering -- 

There is no din, just Nature's voice, 
 Clear as the stab of stricken pain: 
   Those who you call, won't come again, 
   Those you have loved have moved away. 

The Cold's not gone, it's in your bones, 
 It's in the way you slowed-down move; 
   Yours was the Heart that gave, and all -- 
   Body and mind and cash and food -- 
 
In chapters written sans regret, 
 You spent all the Spring you had within: 
   This wound is the sword of grief's sharp edge, 
   Ubiquitous part of human kin.

it’s my way of seeing things

you judge that i have nothing all that important to say 
and look down at your ringing phone 
thinking maybe that person does 
having already made your choice 

undivided attention 
is for storybooks and movies; 
give or take the word 
"undivided" 

but what should i expect? 
there's always something better out there 
there's always someone new and 
someone 

wholly other

The Prism of Thought and Heart

Oh, I am sad and broken, like 
The intermittent waves that cross
The frozen sands of straggling winter;
I am homeless, lost and seemingly evermore
Sad and broken.

Oh, I am one and many, like
The friendless waves that stream
Across the lifeless shores of empty cold;
I am all and nothing -- all that is, and
Nothing that could be.

Does this span and upset
Portend something?
Or, are emotions just things
Sent to remind of us of
Our inherent insanity?

Am I all things,
All broken things,
Or does the prism of my thought and heart
Break the light before it
Can warm me?

The Myriad

Give to me the myriad 
Of pains, regrets, and griefs you bear
And I will spin them into gold
That you can throw away, or wear,
Or any other thing you like.
I can perform this task: and yet
You linger on the edge of doubt
And worry, wonder, frown, and fret.

The myriad you’ve carried long
That twists like cancer in your soul
That’s both your sorrow and your joy
And what you see as, now, your role —
It is a part, but need not be
The self-defining weight it’s been:
You can let go of all the all
And place it here, with me, your friend

And then, within the silent slant
Of colors breaking into song,
The plethora of what’s to come
Can linger - lovely, low,

And long