Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts

Friday, May 4, 2012

Eternal Lovers: Solomon and Sheba

I. His face wise and noble.
II. Her eyes dark and alluring.

III. His hair agleam with oil.
IV. Her skin scented with spices.

V. His robes dyed in rich colors.
VI. Her brow adorned with jewels.

VII. His weapons of bronze and iron.
VIII. Her ornaments of delicate gold.

IX. His fields blanketed in wheat.
X. Her gardens awash with incense.

XI. His forests rich in timber.
XII. Her pastures host exotic animals.

XIII. His palace sheathed in marble.
XIV. Her chambers of ebony and ivory.

XV. His chalice filled with wine.
XVI. Her table laden with fruit.

XVII. His bounty offered many blessings.
XVIII. Her desires were all fulfilled.

XIX. A world away, He loves her still.
XX. A world away, She loves him still.

Sword, Pearl and Rose

The full moon hung low in the starless sky,
its pale light gleaming off a steel halberd
as the sentry kept watch atop the lofty tower.

He drew his cloak fast around his shoulders.
Mid-winter was scarce a fortnight away,
yet the chill that grazed him now was not the work of nature.

His eyes swept across the barren landscape.
Trees and fields lay dead and fallow,
their once bright hues now dull and lifeless.

A sudden sound engaged his failing senses.
Steel and leather clinked like dripping rain
as a mounted figure approached the gate.

The sentry sighted upon the rider’s shield.
His halberd clanged upon the rough-hewn stones
as he blew his horn both loud and long.

The drawbridge lowered with a crash of thunder.
As a circle of torchlight enveloped the darkness,
the stranger drew near and removed his shabby cowl.

Chestnut hair hung ragged beneath a battered helm .
Eyes of piercing emerald shone in the darkness.
The left one bore a slender scar, running down from brow to cheek.

Two pages came running, their eyes ablaze with relief.
One grasped the reins as his master alighted.
The other bore hot mulled wine, steaming in a silver flagon.

The lord plodded wearily across the bridge,
born down by the weight of arms and armor,
and by sheer exhaustion of both body and soul.

The vaulted roof glowed in the light of the torches.
The lord was relieved of dagger and sword,
and so were the burdens of his helm, shield, and bow.

The clink of mail and clang of steel resounded in the hall.
As his armor was removed, piece by bloodstained piece,
the lord felt new life grow beneath his breast.

A page led the lord down a broad stone corridor,
into a room alight with many candles,
and bathed in the scent of fragrant herbs and oils.

A tub of water lay with its white steam curling into the air.
A sight of paradise as the lord had not seen for many a moon,
he disrobed and allowed the water to ease his weary form.

With his body pitted by ragged scars of battle,
and strands of liquid silver running through his hair,
the servants saw that their master had aged in more than years.

The lord was garbed in a robe of fine silk,
and seated down before a glowing fire.
Its merry light cast dancing shadows over his newly weathered face.

Servants came bearing trays and salvers.
Bread and meats were placed before him,
along with cheese, fruit, and the clearest ale.

Sated in body but not in spirit,
the lord bade his servants to retire,
and moved alone down a torch-lit passageway.

He stopped before doors of oak and iron.
With the strength of a lion but the temperance of a lamb,
he eased them open with nary a sound.

The light of a thousand candles met his eyes,
and the air he breathed was thick with incense.
On the cold, stone floor knelt his wife, beads clasped in her hand. 

Softly at first, but growing in tone,
he spoke aloud the sacred vows
they had exchanged so long ago.

The lady froze and rose to her feet.
Turning slowly with precision and care, she gasped aloud,
her round mouth obscured by her outspread hand.

With widespread eyes, she watched him approach.
As gentle as a breeze and blossom,
he brought her hand up to his lips.

His touch sent shivers through her very being.
His strong arms caught her as she nearly fell
and led her slowly from the room.

To their own chamber he led her now.
Silk brocades and woven rugs, as well as a shelf filled all with books
gleamed in the light of the roaring fire.

In the soft-glowing light of the bedside candle,
the lord examined his wife’s fine features.
The most beautiful sight he’d beheld in years.

Her blue-grey eyes like the steel of a sword,
with skin brightly pale as the finest pearl
and lips deep red as spring’s first rose.

Gazing into her sparkling eyes,
The lord stroked his wife’s smooth cheek
and with a gentle touch removed her veil.

Her long raven locks tumbled down,
like a new-made waterfall splitting the rocks
and gleaming wit the slightest silver.

The lord led his wife to bed,
and as his lips at last touched hers,
he deftly shed her every garment.

In the light of the slowly darkening fire,
her body shone like a pearl set in ivory,
and with one swift motion she cast off his robe.

They slipped into the fur-lined bed,
each one feeling the body of the other.
For a time, they lay silent, green and blue forever entwining.

As the fire grew dark and the candle burned low,
the lord looked toward the chamber door,
his keen ears straining for the slightest sound.

Hearing none, he turned back to his wife.
She wore a smile that could undo the heavens,
and he returned the gesture in kind.

Taking a hold of the silken cord,
he gently closed the velvet curtains,
just as the candle spent its last light.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

The Beauty of Music

Music.
The yearning language of the soul.
A cosmic dialect,
so ancient, and yet so modern,
It transcends the desires of the flesh
to achieve the longing of the spirit.

From the alluring songs of the ancient sirens,
tempting the crew of brave Ulysses,
to the modern sanctums of sound and spectacle,
It plays to the view and voice of millions.
Music has, and will always be,
the one constant thread of man’s great tapestry.

Music’s forms are ever changing.
From the earthly rumble of the bass,
to the chilling tinkle of the glass,
this noble art has altered history
and carved a niche all Its own.

Some music is like water,
moving seamlessly from note to note.
As the silver tinkle of a stream,
It brings the mind both calm and comfort.
As the rolling rumble of the falls,
hidden vigor is released,
and wearied spirit is renewed. 

Some music is like ice.
Cold and piercing, It may be,
but always filled with greatest clarity.
As It courses through the body’s paths,
each nerve is honed to fine precision.
Those in slumber now arise,
and sight and sound are optimized.

Some music is like the earth,
with sounds as strong as solid stone,
and chords as deep as the old oak’s roots.
It pounds the senses like a rolling drum,
but grants a boon essential to all.
The mind is focused and full of force,
and the heart now swells with care and conviction.

Some music is like wind.
Be It austere or be It complex,
Its tone is always untroubled and playful.
As the gentle breeze of a summer day,
It brings a smile to the lips.
As the fast-paced gust of an autumn flurry,
joy bursts forth and the dance begins.

Some music is like fire.
It can stoke the passions long and slow,
or call forth a surge of ardor and zeal.
Husky tones ignite the senses,
calming and stimulating all at once.
When the artist pours forth their very soul,
the energy flows like new-minted lightning.

Some music is like light.
Its notes as pure as angel’s cries,
with tones and timbres kind and gentle.
As the warming rays of midday sun,
It drives away the pains of stress.
As the cooling glow of night’s full moon,
one feels joined with surrounding life.

Some music is like darkness.
It could be one of many forms,
from dreadful roars to piercing wails.
It may seem strange, and somehow ominous,
but renders life a vital service.
When one becomes detached and distant,
It jolts the mind back to the fore.

An art as old as humankind,
It still transcends all earthly boundaries.
Whether warm and richly measured,
or cool and light with swift progression,
music truly speaks to all.      

Annals of Archery

1
Born with a head and hair of flint,
from a mother of curving wood and sinew,
this early weapon was a bringer of food
before becoming a tool more sinister.

2
The thunder of chariots upon the earth
kicks up the dust like a storm in the desert.
Missiles fly twanging from point to point,
filling the air with the sounds of death.

3
Homer’s great tale describes this tool
as the bringer of death to the unbeatable warrior.
Flying true from the royal bow,
it hits the one small spot untouched and mortal.

4
The world’s highest peaks border the north
of this vast, great land of rivers and gods.
War elephants change through the dense, green growth,
arrows’ songs cutting through the noise-flooded air.

5
With chain mail glinting in the icy white sun,
these fierce pagan warriors loose their iron rain.
They have scattered enemies to the west, east, and south
by playing their music on these lethal instruments.

6
They came by the hoard from the sandy ocean,
their words spreading faster than new flames during drought.
Surrounding their foes with the very symbol of their faith,
they unleash their missiles as the final gap closes.

7
A time of transition from rural to urban,
the implements of war adjusted as well.
Now mounted across a beam with a trigger,
it unleashes a simpler yet deadlier strike.

8
From the sea of the east to the lands of the west,
these most skilled equestrians conquered the world.
With hard-hitting projectiles launched fast and true,
they surrounded and shot until none were left standing.

9
Garbed in bright feathers and the skins of great beasts,
they descend in vast numbers from their great floating city.
Their arrows are honed to precision unmatched,
the black stone sharpened beyond steel or bronze.   

10
A weapon both familiar and different at once,
it may seem unwieldy to the untrained eye.
Used from the ground or atop a great mount,
it strikes a bold path against the great rising sun.

11
A range of nations as diverse as any;
from seaside coves of the great northwest, to humid tropics down south and east.
In the verdant woodlands and ‘cross the Great Plains,
the bow can determine both life and death.

12
For many millennia it could not be matched.
The most basic principles had the most lethal kill.
Yet even so, it could not last forever,
and was ultimately replaced with a bang and a boom.

13
The bow’s great heyday may be no more,
but in several small pockets it is lively as ever.
From the smallest back garden to the greatest arena,
this tool’s great legacy lives on today.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Dragon and Phoenix

The day is like a jewel.
Clean and clear, with shining light and gleaming sun.
The golden glow of Heaven’s orb, and wispy white of floating clouds.
The time of Father, Brother, Son, and God, of light of truth and strength and power.


The night is like a cloak.
A veil of beauty, song, and love, enclosing all with rest and hope.
Silver moon and shining stars, the eyes of all upon the world.
The time of Mother, Daughter, Sister, Goddess, protect and nurture all of life.


The earth is like a womb.
Nourished and loved, it brings forth life from worms to wheat.
By fruit and flowers of tree and field, the cloak of Iris shrouds the land.
From rock and stone to branch and leaf, all life buds and all life rests.


The sea is like the mind.
Always shifting, always moving, one change comes and one change goes.
From mighty whale to fragile shell, it is a world of worlds unto itself.
Becalm one moment, a maelstrom the next, this mighty titan is both beauty and beast.


Nature's Faces 2 x 2

Spring
The season of rebirth
The season when new life emerges from the now weakened grasp of winter’s cocoon

The green season
The season of Earth
The season when all that grows takes root deep within the bosom of Mother Earth

The eastern season
The season of the rising sun
The season of plants and fruits blossoming akin, and animals opening their eyes from winter’s rest

Summer
The season of life
The season of majestic beauty, of the wondrous colorful gifts of nature

The yellow season
The season of Fire
The season where Brother Sun extends his golden fingertips to warm the land and bring full bloom

The southern season
The season of energy and harvest
The season where the bounty of the land is reaped, and laid upon the feast table as a trader shows his wares

Autumn
The season of fading life
The season of somber beauty and flourishing silence

The red season
The season of Air
The season where Father Sky blows the scarlet-hued leaves, making them perform their whimsical dance

The western season
The season of the setting sun
The season where the sun begins to bid farewell and his sister comes to take his place

Winter
The season of barrenness
The season of darkness that conceals hidden mystery, known only to the stars of the night

The blue season
The season of Water
The season of cloud’s tears crystallizing like the finest diamonds, and Sister Moon bathing them in her silver glow

The northern season
The season of ice and haunting beauty
The season of solitude and slumber, that can only be revived by spring’s first, soft breath of life

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Odin's Theater

The red sunrise sheds it’s crimson light upon the land. A haunting prelude to the scarlet tide that would soon paint the grass with a blanket of death.

Eyes open, muscles stretch, joints crack, and voices whisper across the silent valley, in prayer of Odin’s wisdom and the strength of Thor.

Food and drink circle about on both ends. Weak mead and ale down the anticipation in every warrior’s heart, and stale bread and meat fuel their blood with lust.

Steel and iron glint everywhere under the new sun’s fingers. Swords, spears, and axes keen for life, and the links of every brynie, newly polished, shine like silver.

Ranks begin to form like the marching of ants. Shields lock, spears extend, and bow strings tighten, ready to seek the blood of foes and snatch the life from their breath.

The lull before battle is like the calm before Thor’s rage splits the heavens. Men are silent, deep in contemplation, awaiting the glorious reward every warrior desires.

Without warning, the eastern sky darkens as an arrow storm pierces the calm and falls like deadly rain upon the western ranks. First blood sprays the ground in streams of steel and scarlet.

The western ranks respond in kind, loosing their steel-tipped hail toward the sun. Soon the whisper of death entices the crows, anticipating the feast that is sure to follow.

The rain of death ceases and the sky grows clear and empty. Then, like the fury of the sea battering the wooden hull of a longship, the warriors merge and reap a bloody harvest inside the chaos.

Like fire consuming a forest of oak, iron keens for space and life. Slash of sword, crush of axe, thrust of spear, and pierce of arrow ravage mail, flesh and bone alike.

The sun passes it’s midday course, and lust for blood only increases. Fathers lose sons, sons lose fathers, and Odin watches all from his eye of wisdom.

As the sun begins it’s descent beyond the sea, bodies of hundreds lay upon the ground. The rivers now run with crimson streaks, and the dying sun casts the same shade across the land.

Now, not one living soul marches upon the grass. Discarded weapons and scraps of clothing litter the field as schools of fish, immobile in the sea.

Yet, through the now ringing silence, a noise of a different sort is heard. The singing of a thousand maidens fills the air, and the sun’s last rays become as white as new snow upon the mountaintops.

Sent by Father Odin from the halls of Valhalla, the Valkyries descend upon the land. With hair and mail as gold as the sun, their swords and spears flash like lightning as their silver steeds land silently among the carnage.

Moving among the fallen, the maidens awaken the spirits of the worthy, saddle them astride their horses and ascend into the sky as the moon sheds the light of death upon the blood-leaden field.

Rainbow Bifrost quivers as the horse’s hooves streak across the bridge, through the great plains of Asgard, to the doors of Vahalla itself.

The doors fly open with a mighty crash, and a cheer of equal magnitude welcomes the warriors to join the revelry.

Tables by the thousands are laden with oaten loaves, roasted joints, and mead flowing endlessly from silver flagons.

When the feasting and music draws to a close, the warriors take to their beds, each warmed by maidens both beautiful and willing.

The battles for land, power, and honor have come to an end on Midgard, but the true battles, the battles purely for pleasure, have yet to begin.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Stars of Sea and Silk

From the soil new life shall emerge
The horns of the Ram shall bear fruit
Day and night shall meet and converge
The Rat shall go forth and seek truth

The flowers of the earth shall blossom
The Bull shall be slaughtered for meat
The light of the sun shall grow awesome
The Ox shall be harnessed for wheat

A rainbow shall bloom from a sea of brown
The Twins shall compete with sword and fist
The sun shall reach its highest crown
The Tiger’s fur gleaming from tail to wrist

Fire and air shall meet and unite
The Crab shall scuttle ‘neath the moon’s wax and wane
Evening is pierced by spears of light
The Hare shall brood and give each one a name

Summer has begun its downward path
The Lion prances and protects at will
The sun unleashes its final wrath
The Dragon is fearsome, but shall not kill

Leaves are shedding their emerald skin
Last of the flowers wreath the Virgin’s hair
Women shall greet each other as kin
The Snake keeps wisdom, but still, beware

The air shall cool and leaves will fall
The Scales will balance day and night
Flowers give in to slumber’s call
The Horse shall gallop with all its might

Winter is rapping at autumn’s door
The Scorpion is all of greed and death
The frost has enclosed the forest floor
The Sheep is peaceful to its very last breath

The tears of heaven turn cold and white
The Centaur shall nock and raise his bow
The grip on nature becomes strong and tight
The Monkey shall leap between to and fro

Garlands of holly reside and abound
Land and sea unite in the Goat
The sun shall be deepest below the ground
The Rooster’s feathers like a rainbow coat

The hold of winter begins to slack
The Bearer of Water fills her bowl
Refreshment coaxes the sunlight back
The Dog keeps watch from the grassy knoll

The arrow of spring shall pierce winter’s mail
The Fish shall swim and spawn once more
Heaven’s dagger shall meet nature’s grail
Strength and honor is the heart of the Boar




Heaven's Bridge

As pure as a shower of morning snow,
this milky hue is the sum of the parts.
Like pearls and ivory, shining bright,
or feathered swans and blooming lilies,
it is a shade that encompasses all.

The rosy arch is first in line,
like the gleaming jewels of Hades’ fruit,
or the feathered cuirass of spring’s first herald.
The product of both birth and battle
lends its hue, but not its hate.

A tiger’s tail unmarked by stripes,
it glows above like an autumn sunset.
Shining amber from end to end,
its pumpkin hue lights up the sky.
Eternal fire of peace and hope.

Heaven’s lantern joins the fold,
like fields of ripened wheat and barley,
or a tawny lion amongst the daffodils.
Gleaming like the finest gold,
this honeyed light is warm and tranquil.

Jade and emerald adorn the center,
like the resplendent feathers of the quetzal.
Yang to the yin of the sacred serpent.
A single, long, unending vine,
kissed with the glaze of young tree’s locks.

Shining like plumes of bluebell flame,
the sky is greater than life and thought.
Turquoise mirror of Ulmo’s realm,
this natural beauty surrounds us all.
Its aqua hue is pure and perfect.

The ocean’s richness spans the heavens,
like the shining cloak of Mother Virgin,
or the downy feathers of the peacock.
Lapis lazuli adorns the Goddess.
Midnight sky strewn bright with stars.

This royal mantle completes the range,
like the shining skin of ripened plums,
or heaven’s dew in an amethyst goblet.
A flower in color and in name,
it is a hue both rich and regal.

Although distinct from one another,
these many hues are meant to join.
From the road to Valhalla to Yahweh’s oath,
they bring together the best of life,
and form a whole that shines for all.