Monday, March 20, 2023

VERNAL EQUINOX

 

Light is different now,

          not just that the day is as long as the night,

          but that it strikes head on

          instead of arriving at an angle.

 

It has a new clarity,

washes off blurred beginnings,

creates a sharp focus,

exposes cherry blossoms destroyed

by a night’s deep freeze,

          highlights bird and squirrel feeding frenzies,

          unveils the forest floor bare of underbrush,

          warms the beech trees’ tawny leaves

                   still branched and shifting

in the wind before

they fall.

 

It stretches out the length of the trees

                   to greet the stars,

          sheds images of small spaces,

peers into deep wells of mystery

that surrounded long nights,

          uncovers what we can know,

                   all the way back to the beginning

of the first light.

 

 

©cmheuer, 3/2023

Wednesday, March 8, 2023

UPHEAVAL

 We balance on a transient tightrope strung across

          a crevasse too wide to bridge,

We sway in a catastrophic wind listening

          for earthen tremblors and volcanic explosions,

We tremble from visions of apocalyptic

wild fires, tornadoes, droughts, and floods,

We scan the horizon for an asteroid impact  

          like the K-Pg mass extinction event,

We calculate that the sun will become a red giant

          in five billion years and engulf the earth,

We hypothesize the end of our universe and

          baryonic matter,

But above all we sense the aggression and violence

         of our own kind whose maniacal dance

wobbles the high wire and causes us to

lose our equilibrium and slip into oblivion

like virtual particles

popping into and out of existence.

 

©cmheuer, March, 2023    

Saturday, December 31, 2022

A DISTANT POINT

 

On the horizon of sleep

there is a distant point,

          evasive and unknown,

because it is never remembered

after being found,

 

After a long search

          through blankets tossed and turned,

After mantras recited

          and silent lullabies sung,

After eyes are closed tight

          And breaths taper off,

After sheep are counted,

          the point is untouched,

          while the hands of the clock

                   crawl past midnight.

 

The sunlight strays into the window

          and ends a dream remembered,

          but that distant point found

          after a long, restless struggle

          is still unknown.

 

cmheuer ©12/2022

Thursday, October 13, 2022

RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRDS

 


 

It is the sudden movements through the air

     that catch my eagle eyes,

        the wild dart and loop,

           the calligraphy marks,

             sky written and invisible,

     amid midair hovering, feeding, and fighting

     with wings that beat

          thousands of times per minute

            and hum louder 

        than the earth’s quiet murmur.

 

It is the flying jewels, neck feathers,

glistening in the light,

the ruby reds in a vibrant sun,

that draw me into their supernatural memories

of past migrations,

of rich nectars and flowers

along hundreds of miles

between breeding and wintering grounds.

 

It is the heralding of spring and fall,

without pomp and circumstance,

that their appearance and disappearance

foretell with a sharper vision than my eagle eyes

will ever know as I wander from

room to room, window to window,

in search of their beating wings and sword-like beaks

when the flowers blossom and fade. 

 

 

 

cmheuer, © October, 2022

 

 

Monday, May 23, 2022

PINE CONES

 

Scattered across the yard in large numbers,

scales open and seedless,

cast off from high branches,

and dropped to earth,

their prehistoric commands completed.

 

Grounded pine cones wobble as they roll

across the fall’s earthen floors,

a crop for woodpeckers and squirrels,

a reminder of a tree’s past decade,

fallen nurseries of seeds dispersed,

still littering as seasons pass.   

 

Stumbling blocks for feet set forward to clear

 a footpath besieged with

large, broken branches,

                    and split or uprooted trees,

                    fallen remnants of winter storms and

March winds.

 

A fog of heavy, green pollen fills the air,

          obscures the footpath, littered with

                  the rejected and discarded,

the damaged and broken

bygones.

          Too many to stack neatly in a pile,

          Too thick to walk through and ignore,

          Too heavy to push aside and move on.

 

The annual shedding of old things

        to make room for the new

            becomes thunderous

                as the path becomes longer. 

         

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

©cmheuer, 5/2022

Sunday, November 28, 2021

OVERCAST

 

Pale light, cast over many days,

spins illusions that bury truth and beauty

in abandoned cobwebs covered with dust;

          fades out every scene to grey

                   until sunlight becomes a memory.

 

 A bluffing wind is the only sound,

          nothing but a parrot’s hollow shriek,

          carried across the fallen trees’ branches,

          unheard among blurred apparitions

          drawn upon the slates of chilled, ashen days. 

 

Blazing light, recalled, is obscure and deflected,

          floats behind the eyes as shadows of the past,

          implies that truth is garish and beauty fleeting.

The haze of doubt is all that is known

          and overcast images boast about being 

                out of focus.

 

And thus, we wander on cloudy days

among ghostly sprites, whose malice hovers 

        above the morning sun rise 

            and brings ill-fortune,

                             a plague, and the chaotic chants of

                                      a grifter’s mistruths.

 

 

©cmheuer, November, 2021

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

TWO SQUIRRELS IN A HICKORY TREE

 

        A second-story window elevates both eyes

to upper leaf clusters;

makes visible the motion of leaves,

that move out of harmony

with the tree’s foliage sheath, 

that uniformly sways in the wind

or stands still in tranquil air;

transfixes focus on what is different from the rest;

raises questions about tree sprigs

that jerk in fits and starts,

sudden, sweeping twists of a single twig,

discordant flutters of a second twig,

without any bird flight near the tree

          until there is a pause in the shaking branches.

 

Two eastern gray squirrels

descend the tree trunk headfirst

before the fall’s hickory nutmeats,

grown in light brown shells and green husks,

weight down branches and fall to the ground,

the boughs reach out for the sun

without stirring the air.

 

Motionless again,

the tree breathes in and out

as if in deep meditation

or in the eye of a storm.

 

 

©cmheuer, 2021