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Back & Forth

Black ravens rise beside the road –
A stark contrast against the snow,
Pristine white where the angels trode;
They pause, then boundingly, they go.
There! In the brush! Ahead of me!
Beside the road: a herd of deer.
Pausing – then, hesitatingly
They come as though they feel no fear
And begin crossing nonchalantly,
Stepping lightly, walking, single file,
So sure of their fleeting safety;
As for me? I can't help but smile
As I put the car back in gear
And drive on down this Prairie Road,
In my head, visions of wild deer
Crossing where white angels have trode …
Prespatou, BC 2015 on the usual Saturday drive 82 km South to get groceries in FSJ Probably penned in the little Pizza Restaurant in FSJ

About This Poem

Last Few Words: FSJ = Fort St John, a town in Northwestern British Columbia. A kilometre is about 0.6 miles. I was teaching (and living) in a place called Prespatou, a Mennonite Community, 82 km North of the nearest town (FSJ). Prespatou would not even qualify as a hamlet. It consisted of the school (K to 12) with three mobile homes subdivided, each into two units, making six in all, for teachers to live in. There were two Mennonite churches, one in German, one in English, an Old Folks Home (these were past the General Store/Post Office/Gas Station/Cafe that was about a mile and half down the road). Every Saturday was a trip south to FSJ for grocery shopping and other things. It was on the Prairies, so farming country and mostly flat or slightly undulating except where traversed by small rivers. The main road to Prespatou was paved from the highway, but preferred a short cut which took me through The Tullies. This poem was posted because I want to post Back And Forth Second Look.

Style/Type: Structured: Western

Review Request Direction: [This option has been removed]

Review Request Intensity: I appreciate moderate constructive criticism

Editing Stage: Not actively editing

About the Author

Region, Country: British Columbia, Canada, CAN

Favorite Poets: I like the first world war poets. Robert Service. Poe had some fab poems. Shakespeare's sonnets (Including the ones embedded in his romantic plays). Blake. I am more inclined to like particular poems (such as Poe's "The Raven" and "The Bells" or Ginsberg's "Howl". Not a big fan of Bobbie Dylan and don't think he should have won a Nobel Prize. (Len Cohen was a better poet if you ask me.) I quite like Hope Sandoval's "lyrics". I love Sappho and Tekahionwake (aka E Pauline Johnson). First discovered Sappho about ten years ago. First got turned onto E Pauline Johnson in 1981 when I found a book of her poems in a used bookshop. I now have first editions (1913) of Flint and Feathers (collected poems), Legends of Vancouver and her collection of short stories for boys. Her poem, "The Cattle Thief" says it all about how Canada has treated the Aboriginal inhabitants of this country. The Lost Generation Poets and Edgar Allen Poe were probably my biggest influences, . I do quite like e e cummings though. Can't imagine anyone being able to write like him without looking like a copycat.

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Comments

L

Lord Barham

3 years ago

damn it!

That should say Northeasteern BC! Why do I not notice these things before I post?

Geezer

Geezer

3 years ago

That is why...

there is an edit button!
Because we get anxious to post and rush through the read! LoL
I think that your "Last Few Words" could be almost be posted as another poem!
~ Geezer.
.

L

Lord Barham

3 years ago

reply to reply

I was looking for an edit button but didn't find it. I have been kind of distracted lately, trying to arrange to get something done overseas in a wee island most people have never heard of, from a suburb of Vancouver, amongst other things, so may not have noticed it.

Geezer

Geezer

3 years ago

Just above...

the title, you will find the edit-button. It's bitch to get anything done overseas from some little island off Vancouver. Hope you finally got it! ~ Geezer.
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Jackweb

Jackweb

3 years ago

Take it down..

Rework on it very well. And you will definitely come out with the best!

Show your poems to others and ask for critism. Don't be content with the response like, " It's a fine poem". You won't learn anything from that kind of response.

Michael Anthony

Michael Anthony

3 years ago

Enjoyed the observational

Enjoyed the observational moments in this LB. Are you taking artistic license with the word "trode", or did you mean to use the word trod?

Keep writing and sharing

Cheers

L

Lord Barham

3 years ago

reply to reply

No trode was deliberate. I heard it in a song from a band in the UK (or perhaps an old folk song) so can't claim to have "created" the word. Sadly, I am no e e cummings! – though I do invent the odd word now and again for fun. If it seems like I put trode instead of trod for the sake of rhyme, be it known I did the opposite: tried to create a line to rhyme with trode! (And would the bloody spell-checker quit turning it into trade? I like the sound of it. Actually, I think I got it from an old 60s folkie band, Incredible String Band, now that I think of it. I like playing with language and have a peculiar love for archaic words and expressions. I sometimes play with sentence structure unnecessarily because I kind of like playing around with syntax.

L

Lord Barham

3 years ago

reply to reply

No trode was deliberate. I heard it in a song from a band in the UK (or perhaps an old folk song) so can't claim to have "created" the word. Sadly, I am no e e cummings! – though I do invent the odd word now and again for fun. If it seems like I put trode instead of trod for the sake of rhyme, be it known I did the opposite: tried to create a line to rhyme with trode! (And would the bloody spell-checker quit turning it into trade? I like the sound of it. Actually, I think I got it from an old 60s folkie band, Incredible String Band, now that I think of it. I like playing with language and have a peculiar love for archaic words and expressions. I sometimes play with sentence structure unnecessarily because I kind of like playing around with syntax.

Geezer

Geezer

3 years ago

Yes...

you are right. I trow [I think] I trowed, [I thought].
However, you were using it as a mode of walking ~ Geezer.
.

L

Lord Barham

2 years 12 months ago

reply to reply

This is true, but spelled (spelt?) differently. I can't resist punning and using malapropisms! Malapropisms are particularly amusing when the person or people one is talking to, aren't aware that one is doing it deliberately! And of course, puns always make people groan and roll their eyes. You should have seen me as a teacher in my classroom! Used to drive the kids crazy.

Geezer

Geezer

2 years 12 months ago

I love word-play...

almost as much as any other kind of game. That's what it is, a game to se where one can take a thing and bring it back. ~ Geezer.
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