the jar of winter light

I was in the winter of my life; the folk I met along the road were my alone-born summer.

At dusk I sank into sleep with visions: myself in reckless dance, in laughter, in ruinous crying,

their faces like lanterns hauled through fog — tender torches that lit the hollows.

My memories of them kept the hearth alight; they were the only music in that long, pale house,

the only season I could name as real. When the moon leaned close I would hold each remembered hand

as if it might not vanish by dawn, and in my palms their warmth felt like a fragile law.

Once I dreamed of being a poet crowned in beauty — lines like silver on a priestess’ tongue.

Then fate, an unkind hand, scattered that kingdom: the dream cleaved and flung apart,

a thousand broken stars I kept wishing on until my fingers bled with wanting.

They glittered and hurt, each shard a small cathedral of might-have-been.

I came to learn that true freedom lives in the taking and the losing both:

to drink the whole bright cup, then see it shattered at your feet, and stand unbowed.

So now I walk beneath leafless trees, the year’s last birds gone, my breath a slow pale bell,

and treasure what remains — the fierce soft company of memory, the hard, sweet light of having loved.

in moonstones and opals

An aura of moonstone, 

a ghostly pale gleam,

Her eyes like opals, 

lost in a silent dream.

Luna skies are saying, 

with stories untold,

And starry constellations, 

like legends of old.

Coral reefs shimmer, 

in heavens so vast,

A jasmine perfume, 

from a sorrowful past.

A halo of white, 

in the silvery air,

Shimmery waters, 

reflecting despair.

Beneath the celestial night, 

shadows creep slow,

Where remnants of heartache 

forever will flow.

A haunting reminder, 

of love turned to dust,

In moonstone and opals,

And all turned to dust 

the portrait

The portrait hangs where dust gathers slow,

In corridor twilight, half-lit and low—

A face unblinking behind glass that breathes

With the hush of curtains and the hush of eaves.

Eyes like wells of varnished night,

Mirrors that swallow candlelight,

They keep the hours between two ticks,

Counting secrets in the floorboards’ ticks.

The frame remembers hands gone cold,

Carved with names the tongue won’t hold;

Paint peels like memory from bone,

A smile stitched to a windless moan.

At midnight the wallpaper leans and listens,

The house inhales and darkness christens

Each footstep into softer air,

Each whisper braided with its stare.

Sometimes the portrait tilts its head

When rooms declare the living dead;

Sometimes a lock of painted hair

Unthreads itself into the stair.

It knows the rhythm of abandoned clocks,

The lullaby of shuttered knocks,

It knows the shape of absence well—

A hollow where a heart once fell.

If you pass beneath that patient gaze,

Feel how the past loops through its maze;

The portrait keeps the house awake,

Breeding echoes no dawn can break.

Listen: the hush becomes a sound—

A breath, a name, a hollowed ground—

And in that frame, forever sealed,

A ghost keeps vigil, unrevealed.

moonstone and opals

Moonstone and opals—an argent breath at dusk,

Aura of moonstone, cold and quietly brusque.

Eyes like opals, depth turning shadows to song,

Luna skies unravel, long and opaline, long.

Starry constellations hang like corals in the night,

Silent reefs of silver that lick at the light.

A jasmine hush drifts from hedgerows half-seen,

Sweet as a memory, sharp as what’s been.

White joy, a pale lantern trembling on the shore,

Shimmering waters keep secrets and more.

They answer in ripples, in echoes undone—

The moon and the jasmine and nowhere to run.

upon the breeze

Upon the breeze, a tiny frame,

wings still, a fading, gilded name.

Sweet nectar’s longing, tongue outstretched,

a final sip, a world detached.

Within frail petals, softly laid,

a garden vigil, gently swayed.

The sun descends, a crimson stain,

earth claims her own, in soft, sweet rain.

in twilight’s hush

In twilight’s hush, where shadows play,

I trace the lines of yesterday.

Vegetable tanned, a scent so deep,

A silent promise secrets keep.

The notebook sleeps, a heart unbound,

With memories on hallowed ground.

Each page a ghost, a faded trace,

Of laughter lost, and time’s embrace.

The forest sighs within the grain,

A life surrendered, eased of pain.

The paper waits, a canvas white,

To capture dreams in pale moonlight.

No loneliness in solitude’s keep,

Where ink-stained fingers gently sweep.

But fellowship with souls unseen,

In whispered tales, forever keen.

For in the folds, a spirit lies,

Reflecting back my own two eyes.

A haunting beauty, soft and low,

Where past and future gently flow.

an island’s shore

An island’s shore, a life complete,

Rituals etched, a steady beat.

Yet whimsy dances, light and free,

Blind to where horizons be.

My lodestone guides, a silent call,

Apart I walk, beyond the wall.

Each day’s blur, a dream grown faint,

Till stillness found, a writer’s plaint.

In scents and moments, small and deep,

A hidden pact, the soul to keep.

Returning home, where words reside,

Before the vision starts to hide.

a coolness threads the city

A coolness threads the city — a thin, deliberate sigh.

Pages close with the soft grief of small ceremonies.

I drift through bookshop aisles, fingertips reading other people’s afternoons,

then sit beneath a cafe lamp where steam composes late prayers.

Autumn arranges itself in leaves like quiet decisions;

the sea keeps its slow punctuation, the forest counts light on lichen.

I take short disappearances: a train, a bench, a notebook,

melancholy softened by the hush of ordinary pilgrimage.

If endings are harvests, let me gather them gently —

tea, a finished page, the practice of returning.

Lived through a thousand moons, I learn the grace

of carrying what matters and leaving the rest to fall.

while i eat a radish

and have wine in the heat,
i remember last night’s dream.
i feel an erudite wellbeing in
the language of salt and kiss.
how gently i smeared it on my body!
what love iodine i loved with him.
i still have it, penetrated,
alone from me, perfect,
made for arms and my mouth.
with the heat, alone, my womb,
more faithful than my heart,
remembers him and desires him.
the sweet wind awakens in my
groin, its touch, its aroma,
its innumerable love.

if

if more people valued home,

if more people followed their childhood dreams,

if more people could sit and be,

the world would be a merrier place 

i believe.