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I end with Bloom and sweat
I end with Bloom and sweating,
an achemical green settling on the valley
through my ears I hear him, trudge Dublin streets,
dragging along through interior monologue chains,
allusions I have listened to for years,
they pass as glacial, slow understanding comes
of that intellectual apparatus,
like a mass for the world, none can escape
so said one. My labours begun an hour ago,
of saw, and split, and cracked elbow
have berthed on the shores of these hills:
a bisected tree, low birds deep beneath
sitting slow, dripping, my fog breath
matching that of the valley, grown dark
fuel gone, job half done, I hear the crack
of bracken tundra begun, an approach
of human feet this time, has run,
the phosphor green glow is changing
for orange tender slow, all I can do is look
and sit with its surreal beauty
and wonder at this victory small,
and why no dropping sun from here,
to see,only leaden sky and hill to light
my hungered way home
where smoke and crow roam the sky
and call 'yes, yes' you will come!
Or you end in Bloom, and breathe here
slow, as seasoned wood, on your own.
About This Poem
Last Few Words: I couldn't write a spring poem, but it's Autumn here again, and time to roam the woods, looking for wood, and (only when its safe kids) listen to audiobooks under your ear defenders, after the chainsaw barrage , I listen yearly to the RTE recording of Ulysses - it's truly magical, and the best ever made. Winter is coming! Hope you're enjoying spring up there :)
Style/Type: Free verse
Review Request Intensity: I appreciate moderate constructive criticism
Editing Stage: Editing - draft
Comments
jane210660
8 years 2 months ago
Hi Vandiemenspeak
Hi Vandiemenspeak
Some wonderful images there. I love an alchemical green settling on the valley and the leaden sky and hill to light your hungered way home.
I can almost smell the damp mists. Jx
vandiemenspeak
8 years 2 months ago
Thanks Jane, glad the images made it through the fog!
It's a strange season, it's supposed to be just the other side of mid-autumn I guess, it's freezing in the mornings, warm in the afternoon, then can be drizzly and close in the afternoon. I'm an interloper - but the locals tell me that Autumn and winter down here used to be much more harsh. The old English oaks seem to thrive in this climate, along with the hawthorn and elder, in places I almost forget where I am, and it feels like being back on the Lincolnshire/Nottingham border.
This was the product of an afternoon chainsawing and stacking wood, down in the trees, really quite wonderful the light - I never saw anything like it until I came here, hills everywhere in the morning, all seem to blaze with this almost luminous green.
Thanks, take care,
Chris