Tag Archives: Wisconsin

Shades of Geese Dredged Out of Time

by Thomas Davis

The old man walks into the cedar forest.
Cold waves rise up to thunder white-capped rage
Against dark dolostone cloaked white with snow.
The twisted trunks of trees, born in an age
Long past, reach out into the old man’s path
And clutch at bearskin boots as black as night.
Time whorls as lightning jags above the slate
Of waves, and thunder dances cloudy light
Into a rush of wilding, whistling wind.

The old man stands upon a cold, high ledge
Inside the wierding winter of the storm
And stares at ice congealed from clouds of mist
That glitter as a shining spray transforms
The frigid air into a swirl of light
Reflecting darkness from the dolostone.
The old man sighs, and in an ancient voice
Begins to sing, his voice a toneless drone.

Out of the icing mist a flock of geese
Fly, wings a whir, from cresting, foaming waves.
Behind them shades of geese, dredged out of time,
Come streaming from the darkness of the caves
Beneath the old man’s ledge shined black with ice.
The old man lifts his arms and tries to see,
Inside the mist of time, what fate is threaded
Into the heartbeats of humanity.

The cedar forest snakes its roots through stone.
The storm’s crescendo rises as the lightning
Disperses fire above the raging waves.
Snow whips through wind, a hail-hard stinging
That bites through deerskin clothes into cold flesh
And brings cold tears into the old man’s eyes.
Tears freeze; the geese shades disappear; the man
Stands blind beneath the fury of the skies.

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Filed under Poetry, Thomas Davis

Bingen’s Winter in Wisconsin

Bingen's Winter in Wisconsin

a photograph by Sonja Bingen, our daughter

1 Comment

December 12, 2013 · 10:53 am

Ice and Water

a photograph by Sonja Bingen, our daughter

winter ice and water

2 Comments

December 7, 2013 · 2:44 pm

Trail in Late Fall

Trail in Late Fall

a photograph by Sonja Bingen

2 Comments

November 27, 2013 · 8:49 am

Fall Reflections

a photograph by Sonja Bingen

a photograph by Sonja Bingen

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Ballad of the Barn

by Thomas Davis

“They’ve always been half nuts,” she said.
He frowned, looked pained, and shook his head.

“No matter what, they’re still my brothers,”
He said. “I almost hear my mother’s
Exasperation as she thinks
About the neighbor’s tongues, the stink
They’ve put the family in again.”

As pretty as an elf, her grin
Lit up her face and dark green eyes.
She looked up at the winter skies.
“Storms come and go,” she said, “and tongues
Will wag as long as songs are sung.”

“But Willie drove the tractor through
The barn’s west wall,” he wailed.

“The brew
That Sammy brews could make a knave
Out of a saint inside his grave,”
She laughed. “They had a high old time
Until their words became a crime
Against their sense, and Sammy blocked
The barn door, shotgun ready, cocked. . .”

“The tractor didn’t even stall,” he said.
“It smashed right through the wall and fled
Into the fields as Sammy laughed
As if he’d taken up witchcraft
And addled who he was and sent
His soul into dark devilment.”

“They’ve lived together all these years,”
She said. “They’re old now. Human fears
Stalk dreams and make them long to see
A day when aching bones are free
Of pain, and memories aren’t lost
With morning dew or winter frost.”

“You give them credit when I’d like
To treat them like two kids and strike
Them with a pliant willow switch.
The tractor’s wrecked inside a ditch,
The barn’s west wall is half a hole. . .”

She stopped him with her hand, a droll
Look sparking flitting feelings shuttered
Like screens across her face. He muttered,
Alarmed at how she looked at him.
He’d never felt so ill or grim.

“They’re old enough. . .”

She shook her head.
“They’re ninety eight years old,” she said.
“What is a tractor or a barn?
Ten grandkids hence, they’ll tell this yarn.”

He startled, grinned, chagrinned, and said,
“My mother’s neighbors are all dead.”

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Spirit Bear

by Thomas Davis

As cold as fish, as gray as slate, a bear
Rose from a foaming wave and walked to shore.
Above gray limestone cliffs a fiery glare
Of maples bent into the tempest’s roar.

Out in the lake clouds churned a waterspout
Into a weave of water, waves, and sky
As frenzied schools of salmon, whitefish, trout
Leapt from the wind-whipped waves and tried to fly.

The bear, eyes black as lodestone stone, stood, roared
Into the roar of waves and shrieking wind
And tipped its massive head, its voice a chord
That stilled the storm and brought it to an end.

As winter gnarled inside the bear’s black eyes,
Its breath spilled geese into the lake and skies.

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Morning Moon, Hills, and Sunrise

Morning Moon and Hills

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October 14, 2013 · 9:55 am

Butterfly on the Prairie Walk

by Sonja Bingen

Butterfly

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Prairie Walk

by Sonja Bingen

Prairie Walk

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