[bottom] Sylvia Manning, Moira Colleen O'Neill, Adrien Helm.
The Wednesday Poets began when the Barton Public Library received a grant from the Vermont Council of the Humanities providing free copies of Poetry 180: A Turning Back to Poetry, an anthology by Billie Collins. Following an initial three sessions the group decided to keep writing together as long into autumn as they could and to begin again each following summer. Since the autumn of 2018, the group meets through the winter months as well.
Thursday, April 30, 2020
Folks at our zoom meeting April 22, 2020
[bottom] Sylvia Manning, Moira Colleen O'Neill, Adrien Helm.
Thursday, April 16, 2020
Two recent poems by Hannah Vogel
March 2020
There’s something in the breath of snow
That puts the world to sleep.
Snowflakes murmur unspoken vows
And fractals secrets keep.
The groundhogs grovel lower now
Into their shanty dens.
The sight of nimbostratus clouds
Unfurls upon the glen.
In the shade of powdered evergreens
The white-tailed deer step high;
The fawns born springtime’s brevity
Shall shiver while they die.
And old bucks come count their blessings,
And old doe come count their bucks.
Their judgment day is pressing
On lungs the frost has struck.
But storms themselves are brevities,
Like does and bucks and fawns,
And winter fever’s remedy
Is berry blooms and awns.
So soon the thickets deepen;
The game trails wind away;
No groundhogs foresee their reaping
Among the deer’s decay.
Hannah smiles at her sister Maren. Collen is their grandmother. |
Sometimes the world ...
Sometimes the world comes apart at its seams
Like embroidery on an ill-tailored dress
Or stitching on a child’s teddy bear,
Loved too hard and abused twice to that crime.
Then like some post-apocalyptic vale,
The roads, those skeletons of us, are bare
Save the cracks who lacerate their arching backs;
Whose origins these amble minds perplex.
And in the fields ‘side these nightmarish bones
The stumps of corn stalks cut before the snow
Have reemerged from weeks of that pyrite glow
And rest in rows that reach on for miles
Like headstones, in this graveyard that turns over
year after year, names erased, henge askew,
half-buried in the years of flower mulch
And climbing moss that holds a dead man’s hue.
And lurching in the soil soft from mild tears
They lean aside as though to say
“Thanatos spares no mother or her brood.”
In this, in some cold-dired mood, the land
Some bloom has just begun to entertain
Past days rolling over like clouds and rain.
The fields, rolling over, look almost dun
Has Gaea herself turned over her grave
Such that crows congregate but share no feasts?
They toss the bones; they read the leaves;
Those Haruspices divining doom
And know they need not fear their hunger soon.
The crow flies; birds sing; crows feet keep eyes company.
Thursday, April 2, 2020
Goldfinches, by Jed Feffer
Jed Feffer |
more of the goldfinches
are sporting
patches of canary yellow
on backs
on throats
on tails
and today
looking up through
branches
I saw the star
shape of flowers
breaking open
on twigs.
There were flocks
of robins
on a farmer's field
ducks erupting
in the sky
and the tweedling
and wheezing of blackbirds
in the trees.
It is spring
It is muddy
It is spring
weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
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