Friday, September 27, 2024

 For Sylvia Inoue McCandless



When birds sing at sunset 
Persephone is near
Driving flowers forever higher

Birds flock in the fall
Flower petals float in the fountain
Windfall apples feed coyotes

Winter approaches
Some Rhododendrons already are in bloom 
It may snow or it may not

Spring will come again
When birds will sing at sunset
Persephone will reappear




Dick Russell © Richard M Russell
                          2024

Saturday, September 21, 2024

 

To Freedom



Poetry is shaping words to meter
making visual imagery on the page
sounding cadences as if in theatre
a naked actor performing on stage
demanding you hear him talking to you
sitting in the front row next to the aisle
with nobody obstructing a close-up view
as he leaps like a sprite across a stile
transforming into a pussy riot
with guitars behind her playing a song
of law swinging low in a chariot
decency demanding she wear a thong.
Truth is born naked and is quickly clothed.
What was she singing before she enrobed?



Dick Russell © Richard M Russell
                     2024



Thursday, September 19, 2024

That Was When We Knew


When April winds raised winter dust
in bomb battered London
they sang for joy,
though some were fatherless, iron
in their hearts, a chill alloy
that belled pure notes in Spring,
when sudden gusts shook dust from trees
drab Londoners changed their skins,
donned country airs    shelled new peas.

But where they sang none sing there now
St. James' choir    St. James' bell
both made redundant    silent now,
except my memory hears this knell
St. James' bell    St. James' bell
not named in London's rhymes
I'll not return to Camberwell
now St. James' bell no longer chimes.

There was a rope from the belfry
for tolling the bell   tolling the bell
a few would come to sing the hymns
a choir outnumbered them
whose own parents stayed at home 
where television was shown
an organist played full bore
the vicar’s hand that blessed them all
was maimed because of war

So, with a brain brim full of overspill
among some images preferred unseen
I see when weddings paid a choral fee
receptions were catered in the church hall
where Sheila was in the badminton club
who was good at games and grammar school
I delivered a newspaper to her house each day
kissing before placing it in the box.

Miriam moved among different strata
at the time when skiffle turned to rock
she lived on the corner of Flodden Road
where some soldiers once came marching with their flag 
and my father stopped holding my hand
while he stood to attention and removed his hat
he was once a Regular in that Regiment
that had barracks close by.

Miriam went to concerts on an island 
in the Thames where the Stones played
she was way ahead of me already free
not needing to study for a degree.

Her house was next to a bombsite
through cracks in the fence on Haslmere Road
you could see greenery flowers birds and bees
there were prefabs off Lothian Road
built on flat ground replacing houses
barrage balloons in Myatts Park 
had not kept bombs away.

My mother told of putting out incendiaries
in front of Calais Gate where they had scored
a roomy flat when he came home from war. 

He’d been blown up in North Africa 
then bombed again when he got home
minus an eye and with a gammy leg

That was when we knew what we were fighting for.




Dick Russell © Richard M Russell
                    2024

Thursday, September 12, 2024

The Call of the Tribe



Donal felt the call of the tribe
scriveners for the rich
scribes for the poor
a tribe that felt the color of words
like Freedom

the color of Freedom
is a palette of color
while Tyranny
is like linen besmirched
by shadowy stains unwashable
residues of rainbows
festooned with gaudy
graffiti

Freedom Tyranny
and in between
Donal felt the stir of the tribe
rising for freedom aware of threat
all people of good will
all neighbors together

heeding a voice 
giving voice 
trusting a leader 
Donal felt the call of the tribe
chose freedom




Dick Russell © Richard M Russell
                     2024

Monday, September 9, 2024

 The Hummingbird

dusk one evening a hummingbird flew
through the open door of the bathhouse next
to a fuchsia basket that hung there

only to be trapped flying towards sky 
but hitting plastic recycled skylights
in the peaked roof 

steamy air rising from the bath
an easy escape the bird could not find
buzzing like a fly to find open sky

frustrated and tired the tiny bird perched 
over the old iron clawfoot bathtub
my wife standing on the rim could reach it

she was surprised she said the bird let her
enfold it in her hand and release it
into warm evening air our garden




Dick Russell © Richard M Russell
                         2024

Thursday, September 5, 2024

Ode: To Defiance



When I stand at last on the brink of death
who will I see waiting on the further shore?
Will I see among those that passed before
some enemy’s arms crossed and an air of menace
others with open arms ready for an embrace?
With some I fought with some shared breath.

Will some poets I’ve read be there, Berryman maybe?
Will I see him wandering among trees with Sylvia
deep in thought contemplating suicide?
Beyond this death is there another they could choose
go where ghosts go and be flotsam and jetsam
erased on the beach by a rising tide?

I will not stand upon the brink of death
I’ll swim rather than look into Charon’s eye
for mythic streams are just wading pools for me
where history lingers on its way to the sea.
And if I reach the further bank I’ll see
what my future intends for me.




Dick Russell © Richard M. Russell
                    2024

Remembering Roughside   A shiny wet slate roof was purple steaming to dry blue.  There was the sound of water dripping from a broken waste p...