JD19
KANE19
PB19
In her latest collection, Myra Schneider uses poetical language to investigate our difficult times. Her lines develop concerns and thoughts in expanded imageries that search for new paths. Her detailed observations give a clear and multi-layered vision of the arguments she explores. Nature is often at the fore and helps us to understand our situation and our role on the planet and what it means to be human. Environmental concerns and the everyday struggle to survive in this troubled period are therefore paramount; Schneider’s response is complex and expertly nuanced but eventually positive. We will survive despite conflicts, depression, oppressions, failures and fragilities and the damage we are inflicting on the planet. We will survive even though the situation may look hopeless. In the final lines of some of her poems the message about having faith in the renewal of humanity is constant and undeniable, allowing the reader to rethink…
View original post 592 more words
For Paul Brookes’ challenge. You can see the photo by Julian Day that inspired the poem here.
When the winter king
When the winter king blows cold,
frost-breath furring the roof,
even the clouds crack like black ice,
gold in his crown stolen
from the failing sun, while
we hunch before the fire,
ruffled and fearful as pigeons,
cold to the marrow
of our slender bones.
Another intriguing cloudshape from Julian Day which you can see on Paul Brookes’ blog here.
Hunting
If there were a wild hunt
it would be wild wolf-led
and I would follow
through high tide and gale
through tempest
and boiling clouds
cheek by wolf jowl
the hunting of the moon
the netting of the stars.
This poem is inspired by Julian Day’s photo. You can see it on Paul Brookes’ blog post here.
Silence
The sun is a whale’s eye
great blue
grey as waves on the ocean sky.
Shipwrecks below
thin voices rising
do you hear, do you care?
Grey waves break
timbers splinter in silence
le silence de la mer.
You wink and dive
taking Ahabs and von Ebrennacs
beyond the broken horizon
where perhaps the gulls
will have pity
and answer their questions.
A double badger’s hexastitch. The photos are here (trying to catch up).
The white breast feathers of a swan
Sky full
of the first things
feathered lizards scaled birds
blue mirror reflections
all that ever
crawled flew
soared seas
winged through oceans
breasted the high currents
white-plumed and rainbow-scaled.
On the still pool
wild swan.