Hour 5: Before Winter Comes

Sister Red and Brother Bear, please slow down.

You’re too fast for me.

 

Quiet, child, says Sister Red. We have much to do

Before winter comes.

The leaves are changing. The trees are bare.

Soon the sunlight won’t even care.

 

Sister Red and Brother, please slow down. I can’t keep up.

 

Hurry along, says Brother Bear. We have much to do

Before winter comes.

The berries are gone. The creek has dried.

We have miles to go to reach wayside.

 

Sister Red and Brother Bear, please slow down. I can’t see you.

The leaves changed, and the creek has dried.

Winter has come, and the sunlight doesn’t even care.

 

Sister Red and Brother Bear, don’t slow down.

I’ll meet you there.

Hour 5 Prompt 5. Faith Chepchumba

SWEET MEMORIES.

By the lake we sat
In the cloudy dark night
Reminscing the past
Of wrongs and rights

By the breezing shore
We watched the stars
Just like long before
When we were youngsters

In that night we talked
Of our hopes and fears
Some that never happened
While we lived in tears

We were full of life
With our friends in tune
And without any strife
Just like a live fortune

As the night grew cold
We huddled underneath
A tree near the threshold
While waiting the night out.

 


 

prompt # 5 five short

symmetric triangles

Hues and tints of a sun setting

a dry, hot day has come to a close

 

pinrails a turning with the wind

changing colors

every time it comes to a stop

 

Northern lights a callin’

mirrored glass colored water

an alien lands amid the light shaft

crashing the party.

 

circle round

holding hands

it may hurt, but it means well to stare and to touch.

if trees can touch and feel well

humans can hold and clasp each other.

Make Out Point

Can we carve our names in a tree,
Meet me under a sky filled with stars,
Unmask me and leave me bare,
Show me how to love you vulnerable.
Change me like the coming of seasons.
Have me draped under a thousand shooting stars,
So I can wish upon you a thousand times,

Engrave our initials in stone,
So if we fail to last till forever,
Our love at this moment will last a lifetime.
And when I have forgotten take me back to the River’s edge
And remember how we left our hearts rooted in a place where we loved each other eternally.

We carved our names in a tree,
You met me under a sky filled with stars,
Unmasked me and left me bare,
Showed me how to love you vulnerable.
Changed me like the coming of seasons.
Had me draped under a thousand shooting stars,
And I could wish upon you a thousand times,

Hour 5 (2020)

warm gleam over the hills

ethereal alert

wake up call from beyond the visible

a bright embrace to all beings under its scope

wake up and be aware!

reciprocate!

walk out into this golden world

and seek out the sun in everyone

Skay Hour 5

Muscles ripple through gleaming skin

Beads form and sweat trickles

Down a furrowed brow.

Each move shows the ache

In the overstretched sinew

From the strain of the oar

And the burden of your toils

What keeps you going, sailor?

What heartache pumps your blood?

What makes you keep rowing

To where the stars, the water and the land meet?

2020 Poetry Marathon Hour 5 – Umbrella

It was a rainy year in college.
I had a raincoat,
But the drops would always reach my glasses.
And three-quarters blind on rain-slick concrete stairs
is no way to weather a storm.

My first attempts were colorful, light,
portable, collapsible.
A fine companion in a drizzle,
although scarcely broad enough even for me.
But a hard New England wind, a gust of misery,
would throw the flimsy things inside out,
leaving deformed shelter and drenched disappointment.

Then I found the right fit:
double-layered, with a grip built for battle,
a stainless steel spine, and a hood black as despair.
I carried it forth into wrenching gales
and weeping downpours
and came out clear-eyed and unbowed,
even when my shoes were soaked.

At first I held it low and close,
a double-octagon of barely-covered spokes
warding off both water and fools.
But with time, I offered the shivering forms,
caught unprepared in life’s storms,
friends or strangers alike,
a place in that dome of dryness.

The grace and purpose of any umbrella,
is to be shared.

Goddess from Heaven

v. Accept my Respect

Oh dear beautiful, indeed a cruel world it is, For putting metal to hands, meant to be adorn by flowers and gems.

Oh dear young man, I advocate peace, metals are for maintaining it.                                            I‘m just a girl, no warrior or knight, Wishing well to all.                                                         Respecting farmers for their hardship and Soldiers for their sacrifice.

Oh dear beautiful, accept my respect for you A rare kind of girl could be found of traits  And be kind to let me know about you.

Lavaana my name, daughter of a father who serves this land,                                             People affectionately call him king Talamaar.    As simply she said, as hard he could digest.

 

Sombrillas sombras

 

With coloured fabric the sky is full with surprises

against odds time flies briefly in a subject,

spining while falling ideas into hair from hare above,

roaring cascabel matters and it starts to shake

when it rains everything sound like tingling,

sand and dusty cement cloud rattles everything,

but frantic umbrellas go around to protect,

something tries to unapollagetically be

a healing of fireflies and dirt from striped cat,

a heinus way of stay, but they protect.

Sombrillas paraguas umbrellas shadow keepers

let me go from all af the above with a whisper song