Monday, October 29, 2012


Scattered, then found—poems
October 2012




With stars
for companions, 

what standard of measure
might one ever devise

that ever really
measures up ?


**


Is it that light lays on leaves
and catches, or that light is caught,
that it dapples?


**


Like the lightest of breaths,
held so as not to disturb,
moon beams breathe on me.


**


Everything this morning speaks of space
—the gray sky swept aside for blue, the moon
rests high, showing just  a sliver;

clustered crows, barking dogs,
allow only echo; even curbside grasses
give way to beige.


**

Gina

Young, bright,
not overly certain,

eyes like sky
radiate promise

that fills all that befalls
their gaze.


**


For the grand daughter, Kawayan

Only twenty-four
hours past its fullest face,
the moon begins to “melt.”

I suppose this is
Indian Summer—long heat
over shortened days,

windows kept open
through silver-tinged darkness,
the kind of light

that shimmers
on high mountain juniper
that grow out of rocks

that glow like you do,
even as we speak
of the moon.


**


Out of the clamor
and confusion,

Buddha’s Name
blossoms…

Namuamidabutsu


**

Mid-October

Leaves, browned and fallen,
pack along the streets like doormats
thrown outside to be washed
in first winter rains.

But for now, still summer,
an invisible sun streaks breaking clouds
in soft pink, turns the tallest eucalyptus 
to shadowy, swaying silhouettes.


**


Orion is directly overhead
this morning—what direction
is that, Heaven ?

A dead mouse
on the shadowed walk
is really a leaf, parched and curled.

That adult over there
is my child, is loved, loves
and is torn—you’d think

that would be enough
to find the way from here.
You’d think.


**


Preparing for the service
with the old folks,

reading the poems of Ryokan,
wondering

if he’ll warm their hearts
as he has mine.


**


Shadows play, breezes weave,
through grasses dancing
with flowers.


**


My religion

From the street side
         of the courtyard fence,

beyond the flowering shrubs,
         in lifting fog,

children’s voices pass
         through the lingering mists,

pulled by a bell—
       
reaching,
         listening.


**


She don’t bite, he said,
and neither do I; but how
were we to know ?

Monday, October 1, 2012

September 2012


September Poems


I think of recluse masters a century away,
I nurture your secrets. Your true nature

eludes me here, but taken by quiet, I can
linger this exquisite moon on out to the end.

                                            T’ao Ch’ien



Preparing for my 69th in the Sierra,
Freemont Lake at 8,000 feet

Leaning against the rocks,
wondering at the movement of the years
and the certainties gathered here—ablutions

on a bouldered slope, chanting in trees
in the coming dark, in the unfolding entirety
of the life I’ve known as my own.

I write, but poems don’t find the page. So I listen
for the wind, for trees turning to shadow, for the stars
to signal of sky life

as clearly as I hear the waters 
on the shores of this lake.
And they come,

one, then another, and another
of that silence so ancient, so subtle
that time can’t capture, nor distance determine

the closeness so thorough
as only a poem
can know.

And I’m here, so I write, in the headlamp’s light.
As a breeze from the lake lifts the edge of the page,
I’m here, so I write.


**


Day three

We hike the lake’s perimeter today,
first the overlooking outcrops,
nearly a thousand feet above,
then descend

to slow-walk, explore and fish.
As we rest in the shade, from among the pines
on the other side, an aspen waves,
its yellow wave.


**


Evening prayers

Clouds streak pink,
westward peaks shadow,
the lake grown still

and soundless—we speak
of the sacred, of the day, of early departure,
then slip into our bags for the night—

on a scrape of rock, aside a mountain lake,
in a sea of slow-turning stars.


**


I’ve learned much from the scholars,
and stand indebted as such, but it’s been the poets
who’ve taught me to watch

the misted push of ocean air
along this drift of ridge, through the window
of the place we’ve together built and call home.


**


Morning comes gray
with heavy fog,
Saturday sounds
from the street out front.

Sluggish, as well as
the usual foolish,
I pad around bare-foot,
looking for my favorite cup.

To write something new,
or prepare a few of the old
for the world at large—indecision,
that old friend

suggests both.
So here I sit, over a cup of coffee,
celebrating sixty-nine years
with a song.

                     9/29/12