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The poems are solely the work of W. R. Griffin
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My Hills - by W.R. Griffin
I wandered lonely through the wood
Till high upon my hills I stood.
Dusk dotted low with starry frill,
Burnished skies and lakes with flame,
As golden trees whispered my name.
And echoes through the hollows still.
Eternal as the stars that shine
To dance inside our Milky Way,
To stretch in a never-ending line
Across this darkness vast, divine.
Ten thousand stars in just a glance,
Sparkling the night in sprightly dance.
The waves below me prance, and they
Mirror the dazzling skies with glee,
Close down the heavens come to me,
Awestruck by God's blue infinite bay,
I watch through night till it turns day,
To awake in the dew of eternity.
I span the heavens, suspending thought,
Measure the wealth new dawn has brought,
For when upon my bed I lie
In vacant or in thoughtful mood,
A flash of lightning streaks the sky
To spark my bliss of solitude.
Then when my heart with pleasure fills,
I dream again of my loving hills.
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"The Human Race" - by W. R. Griffin
(an informal Petrarchan Sonnet)
Image - "Frozen Time from "fine modern art.com"
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My Hills - by W.R. Griffin
I wandered lonely through the wood
Till high upon my hills I stood.
Dusk dotted low with starry frill,
Burnished skies and lakes with flame,
As golden trees whispered my name.
And echoes through the hollows still.
Eternal as the stars that shine
To dance inside our Milky Way,
To stretch in a never-ending line
Across this darkness vast, divine.
Ten thousand stars in just a glance,
Sparkling the night in sprightly dance.
The waves below me prance, and they
Mirror the dazzling skies with glee,
Close down the heavens come to me,
Awestruck by God's blue infinite bay,
I watch through night till it turns day,
To awake in the dew of eternity.
I span the heavens, suspending thought,
Measure the wealth new dawn has brought,
For when upon my bed I lie
In vacant or in thoughtful mood,
A flash of lightning streaks the sky
To spark my bliss of solitude.
Then when my heart with pleasure fills,
I dream again of my loving hills.
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   After You are Old - by W. R. Griffin (a nod to W. B. Yeats)
After you are old and have felt life's thrills in sun or rain,
When you have kissed, in morning mist, every leafy dance of Fall,
When you have felt the pangs of love found, lost, and found again,
Then you full known the cost of life well lived and bare the scars of all.
When you have basked in the glow of your child's sweet face of love,
To ache with an ache so deep as only parents, and saints can know,
When you have seen the snow-capped peaks from far, far, far above,
Then you have lived and amassed the wealth only true, true love can show.
When evening comes and stellar dance blankets heaven's heights
When mornings seem so far behind, and dreams grace only nights,
When all your joys seem memories, when all that's best seems past.
Then you will dance upon God's dome where all things loved must last.
As all the suns, all the moons, and all the stars above,
Proclaim throughout the heavens their universal love.
               
After you are old and have felt life's thrills in sun or rain,
When you have kissed, in morning mist, every leafy dance of Fall,
When you have felt the pangs of love found, lost, and found again,
Then you full known the cost of life well lived and bare the scars of all.
When you have basked in the glow of your child's sweet face of love,
To ache with an ache so deep as only parents, and saints can know,
When you have seen the snow-capped peaks from far, far, far above,
Then you have lived and amassed the wealth only true, true love can show.
When evening comes and stellar dance blankets heaven's heights
When mornings seem so far behind, and dreams grace only nights,
When all your joys seem memories, when all that's best seems past.
Then you will dance upon God's dome where all things loved must last.
As all the suns, all the moons, and all the stars above,
Proclaim throughout the heavens their universal love.
"The Human Race" - by W. R. Griffin
(an informal Petrarchan Sonnet)
Image - "Frozen Time from "fine modern art.com"
      We never know how much is left, 
              As obsessed we are with time.
         But when each moment here is gone,
              Every poet ends their rhyme.
          As minutes, hours, days march on,
              Last call, last light, draw nigh.
           The hours, the years, disappear - are gone,
              And all stories end with "Why?"
            Rushed youth sings songs into the night,
             Races the sun and moon in flight,
           Swims the seas, soars above the skies
            But is too soon old - too late wise.
             All we create will turn to rust, 
As night's fingers close our eyes.
Tome on tome dissolves to dust -
But love's poem never dies.
As night's fingers close our eyes.
Tome on tome dissolves to dust -
But love's poem never dies.
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              What of me remains? - by W. R. Griffin                                                    
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To My Grand-Daughter Molly - by W. R. Griffin
The Queen of Night and the King of Day,
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A Summer's Sun and Rain - by W. R. Griffin
As the ticking clocks move faster than it seems -
Too quick the time has come and gone, 
a lash opened, closed - a wink. 
Moments here, a night, a dawn 
Child to man in just a blink.
The glow of a dream is fading fast, 
without the hoped for ending.
Time disappears - the mist can't last, 
there where the road is bending.
The realms of night are drawing nigh - 
no coda, rhyme nor reason, 
The clocks tick down,an unremitting why, 
to fade this final season. 
The road once stretched beyond the stars, 
now shadows mark the way,
The veil of time is fading back, 
to reveal an endless day.
Suns rise and set, and set again - 
Ebb and flow of dark and light.
Mornings come, in the endless glow, 
of an ever-knowing night.
Sight without seeing, 
To Exist beyond being, 
A being without breath,
"To be" beyond death.
A being without breath,
"To be" beyond death.
A million suns to rise and set, 
A millionth moon now wanes.
A million words now penned and yet, 
                     What then of me remains?
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Morning Glory - by W. R. Griffin
The windows are flush with flowers, 
They're greeting the morning sun.
They're sighing the passing hours,
They're weeping when day is done.
Like we, the moments pass too fast, 
like we the petals fade.
like we, the sunlight cannot last, 
We must sing our life's aubade!
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To My Grand-Daughter Molly - by W. R. Griffin
The Queen of Clover is reigning over,
the hearts of all who see,
The sweetest fairy of them all 
Is as special as can be.
All creatures answer to her call -
From mountain forests sweet,
Every creature large or small, 
Will gather at her feet. 
From the dense forests to mountain peak, 
Gnomes and elves play hide and seek, 
while birds on branches meet.
The Queen of Night and the King of Day,
Are her parents near and dear - 
 The fairy world is her bright sphere,
And a giant mushroom is her seat.
 The winds and leaves sing out her song, 
The birds in chorus praise.
And, she shall reign in all their hearts, 
For a thousand, thousand days!
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A Summer's Sun and Rain - by W. R. Griffin
I ran down the hill in darkness nearing dawn,
Past the gate in stormy mist where you had gone,
To find there on the ground the scarf I gave to you, 
Sultry, silken, diaphanous birds of gold and blue. 
When first we climbed that hill, the day we met,
We marked the time with kisses, long and wet.
Now, that summer dream is dust as if we two, 
Knew that summer's sun would turn a darker hue.
But more than we arose from out that dust,
Anointed in the heat of summer's rain and lust.
And in those days between the now and then, 
We've something sweet to smile upon, and when,
That summer's storm keeps repeating in our dreams,
As the ticking clocks move faster than it seems -
Long, long after we have gone, and life is done,
The lasting of that summer rain and sun 
Will be our memories again, again -
Those when we loved in Summer's sun and rain.
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Twilight Snow - by W. R. Griffin
(Image by Jill Battaglia)
                                    Lightly falling to the sod,
Upon the blade, the pine, the leaf
Gods graceful testament is seen,
Gods graceful testament is seen,
Softly soundless blessed bequeath.
Wisps of white, feather light,  
A scattered shawl, a tatted wreath.
Spotted, dotted, white on green,
Billows to us here beneath.
Flawless, fragile, frail, unspoiled,
Clinging softly to the clay,
Serene, surreal, wet, unsoiled,
In the hush of waiting day.
In the hush of waiting day.
Wholly perfect, holy there,
lowly, fragile, fleeting, bare.
                                    Ballet grace and angel powers,
Morning greets these downy flowers.
                                    Deep in reverence, to please,
                                    Flitting, falling for silent hours.
Lightly whited, frosted bowers, 
Dressing white, the forest trees -
A whispered, wafting winter freeze.
Dressing white, the forest trees -
A whispered, wafting winter freeze.
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And with the rising sun each morn, 
in the glory of God's hush, 
I know to stand in awe of all, 
to slow my heart, not rush! 
Then when the lanes of life fill up,
and crowd away the still, 
I find a quiet nook somewhere, 
to ask "What is your will?" 
Oh, come faint voice and calm my life, 
that I may glean your plan. 
Crowd out discord, 
block out the strife, 
So to live as best we can.
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The Woods, by W. R. Griffin
(a nod to W.B. Yeats and  Robert Frost)
Time stops in a day,
Like a flame that's snuffed out, 
As mountains and seas fall away. 
Who of us in the end, 
As we enter these woods,
 Will never travel this way?
   The journey is quick, a second or so,
   The blurring of stars fills the night.
   This journey is us, it's all that we know,
   And, the stars fill us up with their light.  
Only one who has been has ever come back.
    Only the one who has been knows the whys.
The answers aren't there in logic or math,
They come as we sing to the skies.
Each step that we walk, each breath clears the path.
We've traveled to all there will be.
When the journey is ended,
All the broken are mended
And, we shine like the sun on the sea.
The answers aren't there in logic or math,
They come as we sing to the skies.
Each step that we walk, each breath clears the path.
We've traveled to all there will be.
When the journey is ended,
All the broken are mended
And, we shine like the sun on the sea.
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I, Mankind - by W. R. Griffin
A billion pardons I have begged,
All insincere, all soon reneged.
A billion sorrows, I have caused,
All selfish acts and seldom paused.
Unnatural havoc I have brought,
To alter the world with little thought.
Mother Earth has cried in vain
To a Universe that's not perceived,
Unfathomable death, abysmal pain, 
As heralding angels are not believed.
And all the prophets wisdom impart,
While profits and pleasures capture the heart.
All the glory and all the spoils,
Triumphs assumed - no pain, no toils.
Without regard, without replace,
Careening through life in the Human Race.
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Sing To Your Child - by W. R. Griffin
- An informal Petrarchan sonnet
(Dedicated to my daughter Allison and 
My grand-daughter Molly)
Singing songs lasts a lifetime - echoes well after,
Songs in the morning, songs in the night, 
Songs that bring tears, songs that bring laughter,
Songs that pierce darkness, songs that bring light,
Songs that pierce darkness, songs that bring light,
Sing to your child - like Spring rain on roses,
Singing brightens their day, brings light to their eyes,
Singing tickles their toes - wiggles their noses.
Singing sweet songs lifts their lives to the skies.
Singing makes children happy til ancient and wise.
Singing makes children happy til ancient and wise.
Sing to the heavens, sing to be singing,
Sing to the clouds - to the mountains that rise,
Sing to the clouds - to the mountains that rise,
Chiming and rhyming like Christmas bells ringing.
Sing to the rhythm of breathing and sighs,
Sing from your heart, the breast they are clinging.
Sing from your heart, the breast they are clinging.
Sing softly at night as they slide into dreams,
Sing so they wake with smiling and laughter,
Sing so they wake with smiling and laughter,
Sing so they glide on melodious streams.
Sing all their lives, sing from the Hereafter.
                         ******************************                                     
In Memoriam  – W. R. Griffin 
How long in plangent waves
Sighs the wind o’er rows of graves -
Those now in darkest tombs’ eternal rest,
These many solemn souls, our silent best,
Found bright, sacrificing, selfless, giving
To save this ideal, this dream we’re living,
This thought forged, hand-made, processed
From all the history of mankind’s epic test.
They charge us with their burgeoning losses
To make their deaths our cause, our crosses,
Lest they be lost to hollowed distractions,
In a world divided by faiths and factions.
Do so that all the selfless acts of our past
Do not die with their final fervent gasp.
Let each generation pick up this baton –
Carry our grandest freedoms – on and on.
The grounds around each shrine and stone,
Have been christened by their blood and bone,
On deserts, mountains, and in jungle mire
To keep the eternal light of our freedom’s fire
Reflected in the eyes of those who seek it still
To live a life of deliberated thought – united will
Illuminated by one grand cause ignited long ago,
Marked by stoic sentry stones guarding row on row.
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How long in plangent waves
Marked by stoic sentry stones guarding row on row.
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Winter's Plain – by W. R. Griffin
 ("snow bound"- art work by Jim Phillips)
When comes the snows of winter’s test,
Blanketing all once deep green dressed?
The icy winds gust hearths with cold,
Soon musky logs burn bright and bold.
Wafting white billows on sweet black sod,
Where a week ago the plow horse trod.
Wind whips westward from northern climes,
Rattles the roofs, tolls porch bell chimes.
The woodsman and the farmer grey,
Stockpile their crops till spring's blue day.
The livestock are huddled, breathing fog,
As snowbound hermits light each log!
Villages, farms and country homes,
Are now fortresses with downy domes.
The pace and pulse slow to a crawl,
In the humble hovel or the grand hall.
The meekest or the mighty blessed,
Now equal in winter, equal in rest.
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Illusory - by W. R. Griffin
Like
a bird in the breeze
Like
the chime of a clock,
Each
wind in the trees,
Every
tick brings a tock.
The
pond turns to marsh.
Every
river flows on,   
Every
word coldly harsh - 
Moments
now are then gone.
A
thought turns to pen,
Might
it last beyond time?
Only
the grandest of great,
Form
the boldest of rhyme.
Time
moves like the wind,
Time
melts like the snow,
Time
runs out when we find,
Nothing's certain to know! 
Every
warp, weave and weft
Gives
shape for a while,
Tho,
what time is there left,
When
time moves to beguile?
Time leaves as night follows day,
Time is an old gypsy,
And a gypsy can't stay.
Time leaves as night follows day,
Time is an old gypsy,
And a gypsy can't stay.
*(My thanks to Shirley Elkins for inspiring this last line)
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"Christmas Ideal" - W. R. Griffin
I remember when Christmas meant more than we know, 
I remember when Christmas meant a warm special glow,
I remember when Christmas was the crisp crunch of snow,
The sparkle of a bright star on the Earth far below,
I remember that feeling that hung in the air,
I remember the stockings by the chimney with care,
I remember my parents, who somehow are there.
I wish and I wish to feel it all on that day,
When the spirits of Christmas come out, Out to play,
And all of our loved ones come home, home to stay.
I remember when Christmas meant a warm special glow,
I remember when Christmas was the crisp crunch of snow,
The sparkle of a bright star on the Earth far below,
I remember that feeling that hung in the air,
I remember the stockings by the chimney with care,
I remember my parents, who somehow are there.
I wish and I wish to feel it all on that day,
When the spirits of Christmas come out, Out to play,
And all of our loved ones come home, home to stay.
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"House Mouse" – by W. R. Griffin
The week before Christmas - there's a guest in the house,
Our dog's food is missing; we think it's a mouse!
Or a chipmunk or squirrel that empties his dish,
Dog nuggets are scattered - a varmit's best wish!
So furry, so fast, it's in, and then gone,
Raiding at night - disappearing by dawn.
He or she has set up for a long winter's stay,
And likely will be there til a spring milder day.
Now the moon on the crest of a new fallen snow,
Matters not to this creature burrowed below,
Balled up in a nest of leaves, twigs and dirt –
Dog food is purchased; what the heck, it won't hurt!
We moved the dog's bowl to our kitchen inside,
Another set out so our guest's not denied.
If our friend stays the winter, and under the ground,
There's kibble for triple - enough to go round -
So let the spirit of Christmas and crunching resound!
Matters not to this creature burrowed below,
Balled up in a nest of leaves, twigs and dirt –
Dog food is purchased; what the heck, it won't hurt!
We moved the dog's bowl to our kitchen inside,
Another set out so our guest's not denied.
If our friend stays the winter, and under the ground,
There's kibble for triple - enough to go round -
So let the spirit of Christmas and crunching resound!
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Journey - by W. R. Griffin - an informal Petrarchan Sonnet for John Davis, artist of photography, a good person - who loved all meandering and whitewater streams in scenic mountains
And know the
ins and outs and whys,
Of all there is
that's left to know, to go
Where only
brightest, flaming comets dare, 
Beyond the
sun's scorching, searing flare,
Into
celestial night with upturned hands,
To see the
heavens near, above eternal lands,  
To find my
deepest depth, my highest height, 
To shine, to
dance upon the hills through night, 
To start
again, again ... but this time, right!  
To see my way far, far beyond - so true, so clear,
To know that
all that's good is now and here.
And, only
then to feel the silent trod above,
Of all those
sweetest souls I dearly love,
To find the
peace that cannot, cannot end,
To see, to be
from where all gods ascend.
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Reluctant Rhyme - by W. R. Griffin 
Far from the fields and greenest wood,
Beyond stonewalls, on rocky hills I’ve stood.
I’ve climbed sheer cliffs for views suspended,
To paint the boldest world, and then descended,
To my quaint old shaded fortress cottage home,
To find demigods in marble halls offend my own.
Now all my leaves are scattered on the ground,
Far from the fields and greenest wood,
Beyond stonewalls, on rocky hills I’ve stood.
I’ve climbed sheer cliffs for views suspended,
To paint the boldest world, and then descended,
To my quaint old shaded fortress cottage home,
To find demigods in marble halls offend my own.
Now all my leaves are scattered on the ground,
Except for those the mighty oaks first found, 
So thus, I thread and mend them one by one,
Only to let them go, flying, leaping to the sun,
Upon the fitful wintry winds, and gusting snow,
When a world asleep in dreamless fits can’t know.
Now these gilded leaves lie huddled in my yard,
So thus, I thread and mend them one by one,
Only to let them go, flying, leaping to the sun,
Upon the fitful wintry winds, and gusting snow,
When a world asleep in dreamless fits can’t know.
Now these gilded leaves lie huddled in my yard,
Waiting till soft spring thaws - the heartless hard. 
The latest ones have learned - less bluster show,
Brighter flowers from softer grounds do grow –
From this old heart once overgrown with brier,
Now knows the difference twixt a flame and fire.
Then when those who see and sing a different sky,
The latest ones have learned - less bluster show,
Brighter flowers from softer grounds do grow –
From this old heart once overgrown with brier,
Now knows the difference twixt a flame and fire.
Then when those who see and sing a different sky,
Find it’s not
treason to march an older tune, and why – 
This dance, this waltz with lilting words is not wrong,
To seek the silver chimes of sound and dance-like song,
The beat with rhythmic grace in time is rhyming reason –
The bright delight of words shown light, in a sun lit season.
This dance, this waltz with lilting words is not wrong,
To seek the silver chimes of sound and dance-like song,
The beat with rhythmic grace in time is rhyming reason –
The bright delight of words shown light, in a sun lit season.
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Dearly Departed - by W. R. Griffin (a nod to Poe and Hardy)
When you left, I heard; I heard you call!
But now you’ve gone beyond this place.
Once you were here, my heart, my all,
But each tick, each chime’s a fading face.
Why is it when lost souls depart,
In stillness, drums a beating heart,
We hear each sigh, each pulsing breath –
Do they wait
for us beyond this death?
Or is it just hapless wind we hear, 
Over soggy fields and rainy moors,
Do they cry beyond those airy shores,
In the bitter dark so far, yet near?
Yes, I have faltered, failing, falling,
Now with each leaf I hear you calling,
As north winds bring the winter in,
With each beating heart, each mournful sin.
                      *****************************                             
                    Why Now Our Troubled Times?  – by W. R. Griffin
Why now is there such a divisive diatribe?
Why now do many their own home deride?
Why now do we ourselves divide?
Why now is our united cause defied?
Why now do oppositions roar with pride,
How the other will not bend nor abide?
Why now do those who should dare, just hide?
Why now can we not see the other side?
Why now do we ignore this changing tide?
Why now our faith and wisdom must not subside?
Why now can’t we set our stubborn self aside?
Why now do not more of the wise and wary chide?
Why now are some leaders still curt and snide?
Why now does so much of our discourse excide?
How long can this country last without its honor, pride?
How long before we find this once great nation, died?
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************************** 
Saving Time - by W. R. Griffin
Suffice it to say, this is just another day,
And all the laughs and all the tears,
Put end to end, construct the years,
And all the time piled higher still,
 Goes on and on to where life will,
Then bends into the underbrush.
Instead of taking time, we rush!
Until the nights come end to end,
And light no longer rounds that bend.
Then in our darkness comes new light,
To guide us through eternal night,
To a day that lasts eternities,
A home beyond all galaxies.
Then bends into the underbrush.
Instead of taking time, we rush!
Until the nights come end to end,
And light no longer rounds that bend.
Then in our darkness comes new light,
To guide us through eternal night,
To a day that lasts eternities,
A home beyond all galaxies.
*****************************
Winter Came on White Robed Wind – by W. R. Griffin
A frost-bearing zephyr one late fall night,
  Clouded over
the moon, veiling its light,
  Glowing on roofs
on a steep wooded crest, 
  To buffet the eaves
above a barn owl’s nest.
  Wind rustles the
curtains behind windowpanes,
  Awakens the
children along farmhouse lanes.
  The moon ghosts
the fields, with a shimmering glow, 
  The stalks
have been stripped, all activities slow!
  Now life
hunkers down, hard breathing subsides,
  Like the foam
on the back of the receding tides,
  Slipping away
like the years, disappears like the sands,
  Gone away
gone, to far, far away lands.
  Reds, rusts,
and bright yellows, dance on the leaves –
  As the wild callings
of quail are heard in the sheaves.
  The last
shocks are now emptied, crops stored in the barns, 
  The workers
smoke pipes, laugh and spin yarns.
  God’s canvas now
done, as Monet’s, and Van Gogh’s,
  An impressionist
master with the first falling snows.
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Winterlude - by W.R. Griffin (a nod to T.S. Eliot)
A cold and rainy day moves in,
With the smell of leaves upon the wind.
Winter is slow to impose its ways,
At the fading ends of pastel days.
A gusty shower soundly taps,
On twiggy, mossy, grimy scraps
Of withered leaves under my feet –
And, tattered papers from a vacant street.
The shower drums its staccato beat
On shuttered panes - on chimneys; roofs,
Soft echoes waft where the corners meet, 
A solemn horse steams and scuffs his hooves.
Then slowly with the lighting lamps,
Comes all night people; beggars, tramps,
The souls still searching for their loves -
Pigeons fluttering like tainted doves.
                             Pigeons fluttering like tainted doves.
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Until Our Now Is Gone – by W. R. Griffin
The
ticks and tocks of a million clocks,
Moments
now, are too soon gone.
Time
is not bound by ropes or locks,
Mornings,
days and nights move on.
They
once were here, so near, we thought.
But our dreams
are past, they faded fast,
Ephemeral
time, like rain won’t last –
Time soon dries up; in the forever caught.
We
had much time not long ago,
It
seemed an endless day,
We
did not fear the setting glow 
Nor
cry as it went away.
Nights
were our dreams to hold, hold fast
So
into the dark we’d play,
That
with each night we thought new day
Would supplant our fabled past.
We
thought the night was in the now.
That
with each dark - new sun
That boundless time would have its way, 
So our
endless now could run.
*********************
Bitter Turn When You Are Old – W. R. Griffin
Why does God plant us in a field so ripe, so rare,
Only to leave us there till fallow, burned and bare?
When only crows of life circle to cry our names –
All our loves are gone, little of our youth remains.
It is the fallacy of love that burns our leaves to bronze
To dry brittle crackling spines amid green mocking pines,
Beside bright ponds love whispers through the perfumed fronds,
In summer air, carefree then, now with bitter prickling tines.
In summer air, carefree then, now with bitter prickling tines.
Why does He not just allot the number that befalls our fate?
So from first breath we know the where and when of death,
That with the waning light, all love is felt before that
night,
Then all the words we’ve said and said again too late,
Echo, Echo beyond the dark, long after our last breath.
Then, through the silence of our fate all sweet bells must toll,
Echo, Echo beyond the dark, long after our last breath.
Then, through the silence of our fate all sweet bells must toll,
For this parting life, the memories rich, to ring, to sing, our soul.
*************************
Only In My Dreams - By W. R. Griffin
She left, and where she is, only her spirit knows,
So tell me again I should not waste a single rose,
On her, when I do not know why she has to flee,
Where in my dreams, I know how so she comes to me,
And so sweet and fair in sleep she seems to be.
I tell her how naive I am and so foolish old,
And how she has “glad graces,” keenly spied,
That she must blush and tear when I am cold,
Tho, had she sprung in wastelands, where none abide –
In raw heat, she too, would have shriveled and died,
And in my sleepy sacristy of dreams, the angels cried.
Sweet is the worth of beauty that swift in night expired, 
That I must bid this apparition, come back, come back again!
Love suffers to be real, to feel the warmth of flesh desired,
But, as each season’s suns, so quickly dry the rain,
More so in dreams, a swift and tragic love is much admired. 
Sweet love must die - the common fate of everything so rare,
Made greater still by so small a part of time these lovers
share,
Fleeting, passion’s love will forever be so wondrous fair!
 
*******************
Echo - by W. R. Griffin
Can you hear the silence of your soul,
Or does your world get in the way?
The din of discord, "pole to pole,"
Some pass as routine day.
Can you tell if you create your own 
Frenzied, frenetic, hurried tone,
Blinded by your fluttered dust,
Crying at your stark distrust, 
As you raise your crested throne,
Weeping bitter tears of your own salt,
Are your woes cut from denial or fault?
And blinded,  you see only husk,
Instead of sunshine - only dusk.
To stow, to hoard, to pile, stack-heap,
Your jeweled junk, as if replete -
To cough, to choke on your own pill, 
Screaming fate, but declare it will,  
While no one else besides you hears
The noise you make in your own ears!
************************** 
Tempest Lost - by W. R. Griffin
On rocky shores, beside a raging sea,
From this tempest scene, the clouds cry to me,
“I am the dark, I am all, I am me, I am more.”
The echoing sound of this night implores –
“Oh sleepy-eyed captain on tempest shores,”
“Come out, join the souls that haunt this place,”
*At this point of
time, at this point in space.
You are the guest of these words penned, and lined -
Words of woe, words aflame, words darkly defined.
Words of youth, words of old, words of love, words of hate,
Words of regret, words of hurt, words shouted too late.
Come out screams the ocean, come up cries the sky! 
Heaven and Hell know our sins, before we all die.
*"An August Midnight" by Thomas Hardy
*************************
Love and Lies – by W. R. Griffin
Bouquet in hand, clenched white gloves,
She strides the grounds, scatters doves, 
With somber gate, but timeless grace,
Her eyes search the past, and tear her face.
The grassy path through stones is dewed
Her mind’s a maze, her thoughts, a feud,
He lies deep in sleep beneath cold sod,
Where once they strolled, as lovers trod.
This soul that breathed, now is cold, alone
As the dismal rains caress his stone,
Where he's concealed from scorn and lies,
While her beauty fades around veiled eyes.
She escapes to the shade; she shuns this day
Feeble and weak, all her excuses shred,
Feeble and weak, all her excuses shred,
Her heart knows well what her mind won’t say,   
That truths are buried - 
lies are never dead.
******************** 
Youth – by W. R. Griffin 
Dawn rises, a storm despises
The swelter of this day.
It must hide to abide, just a hint away.
While the peeking sun disguises.
Summer welter forces shelter,
So we bide, deep, deep inside,
To escape this torpid, ruddy air;
To deride this garish stunning glare.
Crowds dither, helter-skelter,
The very earth welds up a welter
Yet my dreams to dreams appealed,
Once I ran, Oh ran the field!
Young heart – but youth must yield.
Now with each clouding day,
Deep inside myself I stay,
And, the world’s a smaller place,
Without us there.
*****************************
Creation’s Flames - by W. R. Griffin
The burgeoning mind catches fire,
Creation flames light the space,
Sparking, each word rises higher,
Glowing embers alight, crack the pace.
Poems soar, loudly roar, “This is me!”
Poems toll love and pain –
Set us free.
*****************************
Sparking, each word rises higher,
Glowing embers alight, crack the pace.
Pulsing hearts, rhythmic rhyme rings along.
For soul’s sake, poems quake; march the song.
Poems speak,  poems peak, cast their spell,
Soothing souls, healing hearts – spirits swell.
Poems soar, loudly roar, “This is me!”
*****************************
Waves - by W. R. Griffin
Tides pulse in to ebb again,
Thundering waves demand!
The pounding, sweeping out and in 
Turns great rocks to sand.
The pacing, patient sweep of fate,
Moves seas, and transforms land,
Wearing down all the obstinate, 
Cast by winds, or shaped by hand.
We cannot undo our waning days 
But hope our best were deft.
We cannot change our yesterways
Or how much time we’ve left.
We set our sails so long ago
The sea and sky are all we know
We cannot unwrite this final page
No qualms, No fears, No rage.
***************************** 
A Star For Your Sky – W. R. Griffin
There’s no greater joy on all the Earth,
Than a baby in your arms.
The magical sounds, the greatest mirth  
In the spell of an infant’s charms.
God’s greatest gift is to us alone.
No scepter, crown nor gilded throne,
Could make our hearts fly higher still,
Than when a baby’s in our home.
This miracle brings such sheer delights
Happy tears fill up our eyes.
We are complete with our ‘good nights.’
When this star lights up our skies.
************************* 
The Paradox - by W. R. Griffin 
My heart, my soul -
I'd rather wrap into a gift,
Set upon a raft adrift,
To sail the oceans, pole to pole.
My life, my tears, burned, turned to
Darkest ash over a million years -
A million years of constant night,
Cold, cold the heart that sheds no light.
This nightmare myth that turns, returns
Out of brightest blue, unfathomed eyes,
A heart disguised; cold, cold she burns,
Flaming the moon, torching the skies.
Sirens call - men dare not obey
Caught in a web, diaphanous chains,
Lethal and beautiful - Venus reigns!
Death, Death by love, we turn to clay.
Death, Death by lust, makes evil play. 
*********************
Sojourner – by W. R. Griffin 
Some day we’ll all journey to lush lands afar,
A sojourner's flight to the brightest bright star.
This journey, our journey to all that is known,
Where all truths prevail, only reason’s light shown.
We start out on horseback, our cart worn and old;
The sea spreads beside us, where soon we behold
A schooner’s white sails billowing bold
To sail through dark skies to kingdoms foretold.
We journey up mountains – o’er craggy cliffs tall
Soaring scenes rich and mystic; full vistas enthrall.
When weary we rest in fields flush with flowers, 
Bathe in brooks, sun on sands, rinse in rain showers! 
This journey, our journey turns toward the night,
The sun at our backs, to the source of all light.
In the warm glow of evening, no worry, no strife, 
Our journey ends – there - in the midst of all life.
************************** 
Body Bags and Coffins - By W. R. Griffin 
The sun had turned the tarmac tacky black
As coils of heat rose in waves and shimmers.  
An army green winged behemoth’s engines rumbled 
A drum beat tattoo – as the solemn procession,  
This cargo rolled up silver stairs of straining 
Chains and wheels, on a final journey home.  
In the windy acrid rotor blast, a Captain stands 
With a clip board in his hands – tolling cargo,  
To make sure no box goes unaccounted,   
Or is left behind – His duty done, much too benign.   
His mind far off from field and fray – a routine day. 
There, beside him, a weathered, leathered tough  
Stands stout – chevrons and stripes from sleeve to cuff,  
Making sure his men moved out. 
The sun slips them slowly into the shadows – 
Into the humming beast – a steady last retreat 
Before their final leave – then the clacking pulleys strain 
And snap – a single coffin falls to the track, 
Its cargo crashes to the ground, a routed shattered tomb - 
A ripped and tattered womb. 
The Captain shouts as one white solemn face 
Stares forlornly to the sky, asking why?  
“My God," the captain prayed, "he's just eighteen!”  
Slow, cold and plain the sergeant softly said,  
“Sir, he's as old as you get - this soldier’s dead! 
**************************
Night Patrol – W. R. Griffin
This low light night the winds do rise,
To blow out another rock desert day 
As reluctant clouds slowly stray, 
A crescent moon stalks the skies. 
Stark darkness moans, a dust storm seethes 
A mottled squad huddles on genuflected knees 
The lookouts peer from craggy hillside posts 
Night-vision scans for pale green ghosts. 
The mission goal will never change — 
To seek the seekers as they stalk 
Slipping through rough, rocky range 
To kill the whispers as they walk. 
Darkness makes all blood run cold 
The sweating fear – the daunting foe  
The wild unrest as thoughts run slow 
The silent gut check, the rise to bold 
The waiting ends, the rush clatters higher, 
Out and upward drag these ragged best, 
To meet a millennial foe, in an endless test, 
Buried in a dust storm ringed with fire. 
************************* 
Rolling Thunder - by W. R. Griffin 
 
I still hear the rolling thunder,
I still feel the melting heat 
I still smell the flesh and fire,  
Feel the pain of soul's defeat. 
I still feel the distant rumble,  
Flashes, roaring, rain-dark night 
Smell wet stench of rotting jungle,  
Sweat-stung eyes squint from flare-light. 
I still hear the rolling thunder,  
See the green, the brown, the red 
That drape the mangled mannequins,  
Hear the songs of those now dead. 
I still hear the rolling thunder,  
Speak the chant of sing-song names 
See those faces in "rock" blaring bar-rooms,  
That fade in the crack of lightning flames. 
I still am the rolling thunder,  
I still am the living dead 
And still walk the mire and rice fields,  
Where youth and blood were shed. 
I still feel the rolling thunder,  
See the pocked and naked land 
Hear the roar of rolling thunder,  
But not of crowd nor marching band. 
I still see the sand-bagged trenches,  
Feel the pain of fear-burned mind 
I still hear the rolling thunder,  
But no cheers from those behind. 
I yet hear the rolling thunder,  
From the clouds and cloudless sky 
Raining death on bamboo huts,  
And still ask the question.... Why? 
************************* 
Rote - by W. R. Griffin 
In the late spring, early summer heat of youth,
His smiles were like chariots parading.  
A man-boy – his eyes sparked, made trumpets sound. 
His chin was notched in youthful triumphs. 
Now on that tarmac, the end of a path traveled twice before,
He found it—a fate set with his first breath— 
Worn under his grandfather’s, then his father’s boots:   
A trail etched in stone and fire. 
Into Babel’s breath he walked, into Khan’s  
cradle, where Alexander had passed 
Long ago, where Britannia had foundered,  
Where the Russo-Union failed at last. 
With his brothers, seared and bound by smoke,  
Peering into darkness, up blinded hills, 
He met that winded myth, mirage, and legend— 
And there the fable, fleshed, destroyed him too. 
Shell in a velvet box on that ramp.  
He is not there; he is beyond our seeking. 
He is a memory, an echo of a boy once loved.  
Lost now under whispers and bright chest ribbons. 
****************************** 
Partings – by W. R. Griffin 
The last long pulse has severed from his heart,  
The passed low wave has ebbed and life is shed.  
The once gray skies of constant storms have fled  
The final spark escapes it’s well worn part,  
In this dark dead-end so opposite its start.  
Amid bright flowers on both sides outspread,  
She stands, white rose with her pursed lips burnt red.  
They loved each other once – life ripped apart,  
Now he drifts on those final tidal dreams – 
Such dreams that left him when she slipped away.  
Once souls have left to wander on the gleams.  
In the last glow of light or first blush of day,  
All flows until some merging of life’s streams,  
Brings bitter wonder why as there he lay.  
****************************** 
Epitaph - by W. R. Griffin 
For Mrs. Willis' Pre-AP English Classes 
Bell County, Kentucky H. S. 
The frigid willful braying wind whisks away the graying clouds,
And every hurried breath is frozen but this hour upon the air -
To forge the blackened ground wrought iron hard, yet bare.
It is a friend to night when the webbed light tatted snow enshrouds;
The crystal ice keeps all flesh fair till spring’s kind thaw allows.
The howling herald’s life’s retreat to fairer climes, 
Flocks have flown to balmy limbs leaving the hunter to his whims,
Upon the scurry from the crevasse or the crag to ferret out the day,
for a single morsel of some abandoned grain of temperate times,
the mortal price, the coin of death every man or beast must pay.
Upon the scurry from the crevasse or the crag to ferret out the day,
for a single morsel of some abandoned grain of temperate times,
the mortal price, the coin of death every man or beast must pay.
Whether rodent, fowl or we can stay until spring’s blessing thaw,
Unveils half the cruelest meaning of all things,
and yet is the all of all.
The dash from when we’re born then die
becomes the answer to our – why?
The math of life, the sum of we, the day to day,
the total of how well we try
– Our storied rhyme, each breath by breath
is etched by hand from birth to death.
Unveils half the cruelest meaning of all things,
and yet is the all of all.
The dash from when we’re born then die
becomes the answer to our – why?
The math of life, the sum of we, the day to day,
the total of how well we try
– Our storied rhyme, each breath by breath
is etched by hand from birth to death.
************************* 
A Poem Is Our Echo! – by W. R. Griffin 
A poem is the dream within our deepest dream
A poem is much more than it could ever seem 
A poem is the calming calm after every silent scream 
A poem is the relief that’s felt after our darkest storm 
A poem is beyond the sum of all its words and form 
A poem is that jagged edge far out beyond all norm 
A poem is that precious breath of freshly rain-cleaned air 
A poem is your in-most self, your secrets, foul or fair 
A poem is your rage, your song – it’s everything you feel 
A poem is salvation; our desperate need to heal 
A poem is that searing shot, white hot, into our soul 
A poem is that blackest black we feel from pole to pole 
A poem is that brightest light of every rising sun 
A poem is that inner peace when every day is done 
A poem is your bane, your love, your hate and worse 
A poem is our deepest peace, and our violence in verse 
A poem is the abstract you, your essence out of air 
A poem is your love, your hate, erupting raw and bare 
A poem is that final plea, that final halting breath 
A poem is those buried words that fester after death 
A poem is the sum of sums of all our billion parts 
A poem is our last wish to those final beats of hearts 
A poem speaks in whispers, shouts or sings or cries 
A poem is every waking thought, until everybody dies. 
A poem is the sound of sounds that we’ve have never heard 
A poem is our echoed self, not knowing word for word. 
************************** 
Keepsake – W. R. Griffin
Upon the parted sepia pages,
So frail, so firmly pressed 
By youthful loves' fevered iron – 
Like her pair of paisley pants,  
Rests sweet petals of their romance – 
Perfumed envelope, stamped; addressed –  
A pale but fervent echo of the ages;  
Not Keats, nor Shelly - not from Byron, 
But a simple earnest waltzing dance, 
Not from a seer, scion or some sages, 
Though his heart leaped within his chest. 
He could not fathom through fears and fates, 
If beyond this temporal veil - she waits. 
But there, through tears, and memories’ mist 
After so many years, lay the sprig she kissed. 
Rory  – by W. R. Griffin 
An old man sees his first Grandson – a tiny king!
1st Prince of a new clan, another line to flow 
Through time’s stream, another bud of spring – 
This universal child, that all must see, must feel, must know.  
Cosmic clouds are in his tiny hands – he’ll grasp, and cling 
To this universe – to dry his tears, the solar winds will blow. 
Those close will see this sprout grow strong, to never yield, 
To command the angels, armed with a herald’s sword and shield!
Each cry, every murmur, each word is our command.
Each cry, every murmur, each word is our command.
Against this soulless world where he and the angels stand 
Against this tattered book that’s seems so set, so sealed. 
Yet, his dreams are firm – set resolute and must not be repealed.
We declare this child shall have a chance to thrive,
To strive, to burst the sun – to illuminate all that is alive.
We declare this child shall have a chance to thrive,
To strive, to burst the sun – to illuminate all that is alive.
*************************** 
Our Winter's Song - By W. R. Griffin  
Winter billows her downy veil,
As dim mists come and in waves, arise. 
Those who listen, can hear her sighs— 
In the glen under her moaning gale. 
Beyond, these airy shadows pale 
Soon flee before our sallow eyes. 
With soulful sounds, they mourn demise-  
These emptied souls, all sins bewail. 
Then at the peak of the coldest hour, 
Those now gone, and the graying meet,  
Their deep sighs swell this saddest kind, 
In the din, and darkest waves of dour.  
And yet our shadows' dreams are sweet; 
They soothe the weary, woeful mind, 
Heard above the wind by all left behind, 
As our last minutes, the dusty fates devour. 
************************************** 
First Cathedral – by W. R. Griffin 
Grander still than all the monuments of man
Stands the first forest under night light divine – His plan! 
Trees and leaves that filter, focus light 
Colors of the spectrum dance and glow His might 
In shadowed depths where few of us have trod 
Cedars sigh, from canopy to forest bed, a reverent nod 
Ferns and pines lift limbs to all grand nature, wise, 
Up from vale to hills - unto celestial skies. 
A billion, billion lights look down, no word is said 
But, in a single moment all the universe is read 
In His cathedral spreads a deep retreat  
With emerald choir lofts on branching crofts   
Where feathered choirs meet. 
And, there, under the starry evening vespers light  
God listens to this sweet - sung peace of night.
 ************************************ 
Eden Reborn - by W. R. Griffin 
We can only hope each child that's born
Comes to a world that's not forlorn 
But brighter still than our best recall 
Yes, a fairy tale to enchant, enthrall 
With the hope that they will blossom bright 
Under sunny ski and starry night 
I know that this is much to ask 
Far grander than God's greatest task 
But if He controls the heavens grand 
Then He can wave His mighty hand 
To turn us back toward Eden's way 
When we knew no evil thought or day 
To cast out the evil that cast us astray 
Eden reborn - here to stay! 
************************** 
 
That Final Eve - by W. R. Griffin 
The air is crisp and cold this dawn,
The frost's not far behind. 
The fall’s arrived; the summer’s gone – 
Now winter comes to mind. 
Another year is winding down,  
Another age is near.  
The never ceasing spin of time  
Moves God's celestial sphere. 
We hear and hear when we are young, 
That life will travel fast. 
We hear that soon we will be old – 
That youth and love can't last. 
We hear so soon that night appears – 
Bright things in life must end. 
We do not listen behind our tears, 
But cling to the dreams we mend. 
So sooner still the days are done, 
And quickly fall must leave.  
Each rising dawn, each setting sun 
Brings on that final eve. 
************************* 
That Hour, That Day – W. R. Griffin 
The family “we” must celebrate all that they have given,
The gifts of love, of flesh, and blood sent to highest heaven. 
The horrendous mystery of it all, the gloried, painful sight, 
That trumpets selfless bravery, celebrates each life. 
Hold these dreams for times that come, the hours, days and years. 
Carve each step, each soul, each word, the loves, the tears. 
Celebrate each echoed life, and we must never be 
In too much hurry not to stop, to smell, to touch, - to see. 
Celebrate all these souls; the highest gifts they gave 
The love, the hopes, their sweetest kiss, must last beyond the grave. 
************************** 
Last Journey – by W. R. Griffin  
How dark is the night, how cold is this coach
The clouds have departed; The stars now approach. 
Beyond the pale moon, through stellar mists we have flown, 
Winged horses, hooves silent, the only breath was my own. 
The gates are soon parted to eternity’s door 
The sun’s now my ceiling; the sky’s now my floor. 
The walls are eternal, with marble columns in air 
A City of Scions, creatures grotesque and fair. 
Whence came I, I hold now in memories’ trace 
Some will mourn me, others scorn me this mystical place. 
My life's now a measure of all memories deep 
Till eternity’s ashes, the winds away sweep. 
************************** 
The Last Breath – by W. R. Griffin 
Their ragged breath was shed
The rasp that none can fake 
On that black, roiling edge 
All coming nights forsake. 
The weary, burdened trail 
Marked by their brooding sum.  
Their clenching teeth, skin pail – 
Hushed beating of life’s drum. 
The air’s now dark and deep 
They’ve waved their final wave. 
No one can stop this sleep, 
No one can mask the grave. 
*************************** 
Biblical Summer - by W. R. Griffin 
The sun has overpowered Earth, it steams in fiery air,
The forces of the cooler climes have shrunk away afraid. 
Only the darkest sheltering nooks and sweeter shade 
Escape the swelter of our star's unremitting glare 
That burns upon the earth’s cowering, bending plants. 
It drives small creatures under to their burrowed maze 
Or they fall to die on fields amidst the torrid haze. 
The beast beside the forest fountain, gazes, grazes, pants, 
Forced to exodus his hills and valley’s shriveled brown; 
The bird hides in darkest tree, the snake into its den, 
Gasping, muddy fish wallow in hot streams, and men 
Cringe from heaven’s burning every city, village, town. 
God’s kept His promise and from the darkness sent  
Instead, a warning breath down from His firmament. 
************************** 
Epiphany - by W. R. Griffin 
I listen to the sound of a straight down summer rain.
There is no percussion, only the gentle strains of strings. 
The crash of cymbals, drums and the blare of brass are missing.
I hear only low and distant whispers; a soft waltz of memories.
I hear only low and distant whispers; a soft waltz of memories.
Yesterday, the flash and clash of duties done,
Eclipsed the velvet songs of earth and heaven.
Though, now a pastorale rises from the winds and reeds,
And the deeds of breathing have become the breezes singing.
Eclipsed the velvet songs of earth and heaven.
Though, now a pastorale rises from the winds and reeds,
And the deeds of breathing have become the breezes singing.
Gray skies are nature's compromise; a diminuendo -
A flowing coda - animato to adagio - rising softly on a solo clarinet.
While my chorus chants: It is much better late than never.
This Opus is ending as I become the ground I will inhabit!
A flowing coda - animato to adagio - rising softly on a solo clarinet.
While my chorus chants: It is much better late than never.
This Opus is ending as I become the ground I will inhabit!
************************** 
Growing Invisible - By W. R. Griffin
Yeats wrote that when we’re old and filled with sleep,
Nodding by a fire, we’ll recall those loving thoughtful streams,  
Nudged by a book, filled with sweet desire, to feel love deep 
In aching enthrall, our reverie before those everlasting dreams.   
It seems he spoke of grace, a sorrowed face; love false and true,
The pilgrim soul, like you, who stole this heart and mind entwined,
With such grace and beauty only the classics long ago imbue –
Lost in all the years of sweet silent tears and thoughts of all divined.
The pilgrim soul, like you, who stole this heart and mind entwined,
With such grace and beauty only the classics long ago imbue –
Lost in all the years of sweet silent tears and thoughts of all divined.
Truth is we fade, dissolve long before that final halting breath 
To not be seen lest we remind them all they too will face that death.
They fear to care beyond their own moments of this now and then,
They too will leave this world long before their end.
They fear to care beyond their own moments of this now and then,
They too will leave this world long before their end.
*************************** 
That Perfect Day – by W. R. Griffin
To have one perfect day again to play
In fall’s crisp leaves, it’s bright chilled air,  
Or perhaps under those breezy azure skies of May 
Where once again we are all there, a perfect scene 
Just as we were back when, so long, so long ago 
And no one knows there’s been that dark between. 
Would it be as we loved it, and was it really so? 
Could we capture the prism of that perfect day? 
Hold on and on to that dreamy light, to pretend  
This life will never die - that we will never go? 
Could it be again, and if we could, would it never end? 
Oh, to capture all those moments, held in one bright rhyme. 
A chance to say and say again - we wish we had more time. 
Be there no end, but an in-between, a doorway from our past,
Where moments live to live again - can our dreams forever last?
Where moments live to live again - can our dreams forever last?
************************** 
Summer Songs – by W. R. Griffin
  
We feel the warmth of sun and wind-song play
On grassy waves and late leaves of May. 
So quick the moments passed since frost was here. 
So soon is gone the springing of each year. 
Nature sings its pleasures dark and light, 
Holding firm to each day and brightens night. 
Songs flit from flower to flower with such ease 
Over dried and mossy ground, under starlit trees. 
June’s cicada choir sings this ode to life renewed, 
Rising from forest shade, echoes to moonlit hill.   
Sparking fireflies flitting, dancing, softly hued – 
Sweet breezing beams of light, waltzing and still. 
All this brings love or nothing can bring love, 
Drawn from fertile Earth; quenched from clouds above. 
Nature sanctifies this life with all she wishes; wills. 
If we but watch and listen – all fulfills. 
************************** 
Poets - by W. R. Griffin
Skittish, twitchy, flighty birds  
And squirrels that hide their secret  
Treasures deep inside an ancient  
Twisted tree, where they abide 
To scratch the walls and hide  
Some etching of their worth, whims and wounds -  
Shells, dried leaves and trinkets in their tombs  
Mocked by "Them" - Those gods they fear. 
They gather in the pantheon of night sound, 
To host, under the moon, a Bluejay on a throne 
That brought some shinning bead they worship  
In the pale white of lunar light 
And a graying shadowed wisp of cloud. 
They mask their craven need to enshrine  
A single tiny silver, silken tear, a droplet  
In a golden leafed-lined holy goblet,   
Yet afraid to intone a single word out loud. 
A bell not rung, a song not sung - a shroud.
**************************
Unsaid – by W. R. Griffin 
I do not see with just my eyes
Divining into all souls instead. 
In there, rife echoes crowd my head 
Flowing from beyond my skies. 
I hear hum buzzing alive and dead – 
The ringing roaring of all not said. 
I step slow softly inside dark glow, 
Walk slight lightly and shadow slow, 
To fathom the frenzied, frayed and fraught 
To burst wide open with all I’ve caught. 
I will not decipher all this I fear -- 
Noises not mine, past echoes, I hear. 
Unspoken words find wings all their own, 
Painting stark pictures, we soundly bemoan, 
Every quick slight, all the barbs, bites and slashes, 
Rekindle the past from our cold scattered ashes. 
Flip words unspoken, the echoes of past, 
Grow a life all their own, to fester and last. 
**************************
Is Love Still There? - By W. R. Griffin
**************************
Is Love Still There? - By W. R. Griffin
As the summer moon plays,
plays on these darkening skies
And wistful breezes weave 
from branch to branch in sighs,
from branch to branch in sighs,
I hear your magic murmurs slip and rise 
from their silver streams
To this darkening world where such nights
are dared in lovers' dreams.
from their silver streams
To this darkening world where such nights
are dared in lovers' dreams.
I’m here from the last of setting sun 
to the rising dawn of each new day,
Here in the midst of winter’s snows
through to the bowing flowers of May,
But soft, soft your words and gestures stole away
and now my days are few.
You are not here with me to see this masterpiece
that heaven makes for you.
to the rising dawn of each new day,
Here in the midst of winter’s snows
through to the bowing flowers of May,
But soft, soft your words and gestures stole away
and now my days are few.
You are not here with me to see this masterpiece
that heaven makes for you.
So now in my aging silent nod 
I see your faded silhouette and hear
I see your faded silhouette and hear
Your breath upon my neck 
as we beg all stellar light to reappear
as we beg all stellar light to reappear
Yes, this near hollowed shell seeks the love, 
the love I know we knew,
When you gave me all my dreams in dreams –
When you gave me you.
the love I know we knew,
When you gave me all my dreams in dreams –
When you gave me you.
 ****************************
 On Our Own – by W. R. Griffin
Our whispered wishes cannot stave the night,
Litanies cast like spells won’t save this light. 
Mortal distractions merely mask our gloom, 
Extol your truths – unlock this final room. 
Suspend your breath – capture your life in rhyme, 
Delay your death in dreams extending time. 
Fear not the ride around that final bend – 
Poems make our words immortal – forever penned. 
They’re on the page to see our sight bright black, 
Full troves among the tomes from rack to rack. 
Some may forget us – some may miss us here. 
To sing the songs of all that we held dear. 
You will not find me changed from what you knew— 
If after death all this I write holds true. 
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Ruins - by W. R. Griffin
- Dedicated to Mrs. Willis' Pre-AP English Classes
at Bell County, Kentucky H. S.
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Ruins - by W. R. Griffin
- Dedicated to Mrs. Willis' Pre-AP English Classes
at Bell County, Kentucky H. S.
Time flows as we ebb from tide to tide
But can’t remove, or wash away our pain, 
Nor blot our tears as sun dries up each rain –  
And can’t revive the love that has long died.  
Snows melt to rivers down the mountainsides, 
Leaves burn in piles like pyres in the fields, 
While throughout the years love’s loss never yields: 
Suns rise and set and yet love’s pain abides. 
There are a million places one can hide 
To keep until this memory can blur, 
Relief, freed from every thought of her – 
Where memories of all can be denied. 
I tell myself, "There are no markers here!” 
To plague and pock me from a love once dear! 
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Crossing The Void - by W. R. Griffin
   
To rage, rage at the dying of our light
We need the seen and all the sound 
Of night must be heard, must be our sight. 
Sound on sound to pound where air is gone 
Turning the routed shout into this muted Babylon,  
Speaking the speech they cannot know to hear. 
The raving lunatic turns the sanely sick to seer. 
The silent scream in space turns to a distorted face. 
The inane noise becomes the humdrum of the sane. 
The freighted weight of hollowed words once dense 
No longer resonate, and cannot, cannot make sense  
To those who unlock the gates for the bored annoyed. 
As the old men cry out in a drowned down silent shout   
That no one can hear nor see these once bright flames 
In the rush to push them out, to toss them to the void. 
The withered women cry for all the silent with no names 
Who are not there in all the eyes of those eyeless stares, 
The silent din drowns out the shout of anyone who cares. 
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The Death of Reason - By W. R. Griffin 
Have we strayed that far?
Once our thoughts expressed, 
Heart-felt, peacefully confessed, 
Gauged our minds, told where we are 
As a people, society – a civil nation. 
Now it seems it’s open season 
On those who speak for unity 
Not of self, but of the whole of we; 
For that common sense that made us free! 
When did peaceful discourse turn 
To blood lust, insanity and treason? 
Have we killed the age of reason? 
Words well-stated and with foundation 
Once ruled our minds and hearts, made us learn 
When we were one, yet of disparate parts, 
More of one mind; much the same of hearts, 
To earn our place in the vibrant civil discourse. 
Revive the fountain of thought that is the source 
Of humanity –the best we know of God’s creation, 
Solidarity that forged our precious nation! 
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Doppelgangers - By W. R. Griffin
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Doppelgangers - By W. R. Griffin
Unknowingly, we meet divinity hailing:
A Ragman – tattered soul, unveiling,  
A pushcart brimming with trash,  
A Bag-Lady with an umbrella, railing  
At a world gone mad with hatred’s rash.  
Churchgoers roar by in SUV’s  
For weekly blessing, to get in lines,  
Beating wallet breasts, confessing  
Sins measured by the money disease  
As our TV’s list the latest signs.  
Bag Lady and a Ragman dash to cross,  
Absent reason in our senseless cloying.  
Hitting them is no one’s loss –  
Hand wringing sad but more annoying.  
As paper prophets declare "The End of Time,"  
Pharisees note reason's death - a Caiphus crime.
***************************
I measure every face I glance - By W. R. Griffin
I measure every face I glance.
I gaze to fathom eyes.  
I delve to see if there’s a chance 
Their soul unmasks all whys. 
I wonder if they feel alone,  
Or if they feel at all.  
I cannot tell if it is known –  
Time chides; The Fates enthrall.  
I wonder if they live to live –  
Or if they cannot cry –  
Of if they could they’d gladly give  
Their souls to never die. 
I know that some would hold on long 
To life at any cost.  
An imitation of a song
Where all the notes are lost. 
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 Ways - By W. R. Griffin 
Sons of Time, walking your swaggering ways,
Stuffed, numbed – casting desperate, feckless seeds, 
Marching single file through your endless days, 
Bringing bangles,  flames for your callow needs. 
Each offers his soul,  fills a single plate, 
Clings to paper stars on a crepe blue slate. 
In my garden, I watched your ritualistic play, 
Forgetting my wish, gone one early morn. 
I grew lilies; roses, hoping against hope to stay, 
Then turned, bowed and departed silent too late. 
Beyond this solemn realm, lays my mournful scorn. 
He chides me, forgetting, regretting my echoed fate. 
**************************
Dreams - By W. R. Griffin
**************************
Dreams - By W. R. Griffin
Hold fast, hold fast to all your vast dreams
Hold onto them in spite of all the bad that seems 
To drag you back down, down into this muddy earth 
Dries up your life, your hopes, anything made of mirth. 
If you allow your dreams to turn to dust and die 
They’ll blow away; turn into song-less birds that won’t fly. 
Hold so tight to your dreams the bones in your fingers hurt 
Plant them back; water them, in finer, fertile dirt. 
Cause when your dreams are gone for good,  
There’s only The Hood,  
A barren field  
Hermetically sealed. 
So wherever you go,  
There’s a lot of nothing  
And it’s frozen in snow 
************************** 
Metamorphosis - By W. R. Griffin 
Not like our crafted paradigm of fame,
With dimpled pride astride; worked by hand. 
For our coastal, sea-washed, sun-kissed fate-filled land 
Where brilliant men esteemed this dream aflame. 
Is this Lady Liberty’s’ land of freedom’s name? 
Horn of plenty and beacon we command? 
The glowing words all weary-eyed demand? 
Now sneering minds cry out cut off her mane; 
Bind her hands with frantic wild-eyed glee. 
Hear our snarling lips, “Keep your tired poor.” 
Don’t send your wretched refuse to work free – 
Those anxious dreams from overburdened shore. 
Return them home or cast them out to sea.
Turn out her lamp and bar the golden door. 
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Aphrodite - By W. R. Griffin   
She is ethereal but neither faint nor frail,
She is essence, not easily yours nor mine. 
She did not earthly learn from some sultry-tale, 
But those lips do grace her - a goddess valentine. 
Her long chestnut hair is full, more than any woman needs. 
In the sun her amber tints hint, glint bright at me! 
Her voice is song – a siren’s sultry string of dulcet beads,
Her voice is song – a siren’s sultry string of dulcet beads,
Airy tones filtered through a conch shell by a windswept sea.  
She loves with all the otherworldly love she can, 
As our impassioned dreams turn all earthly love divine, 
Although, she was not made for the dust of any mortal man, 
Sweet ether – she can never, ever be all yours nor mine. 
Yet, we regret: Men still drain their blood for a single smile, 
From that ripe mouth, those hypnotic eyes - only to drown in her denial. 
*************************** 
End Dream -By W. R. Griffin 
 
I lay by a pond on a winter day,
Under the sun, in snow only I had trod – 
A few clouds wafting, the rest ran to God. 
I had fallen and turned ashen gray. 
My eyes were the eyes that in youth dared 
To unlock riddles – left silent long, long ago, 
And of words thrown harsh; sabers bared. 
My quest for truths now - a dusty, empty row. 
The light in my eyes faint, a dimming ring, 
Alive enough though – too, too soon to die. 
Dark, dark that grim visage has crept nearby, 
Like the ominous bird of Poe’s silent wing. 
My book is now written; lessons, loves, deceits, 
Rife stark images, shapes stacked in sheaves. 
My face is burning as my mind retreats, 
By the pond, ice-edged, among cold dead leaves. 
************************** 
Immortality – by W. R. Griffin 
When I have bowed silent and left this stage,
Will some recall sweet memories of mine? 
Aged essences distilled from some brown page, 
Hardy spirits transcending death’s black line. 
Who will pause awhile in a brief aubade? 
Who will sigh upon an ode sad yet true? 
Who will know my regrets and debts unpaid? 
Who will bring this sum of my life to view? 
Late, late reflections, there in ranks parade, 
Late sighs now wishes this sly world denied, 
Too late bold in this fitful masquerade. 
Much, much too late, with everything I tried. 
Beyond my fate, these phantom-thoughts I mime – 
Scribbled words of old strive to last in time. 
************************** 
Late Fall – by W. R. Griffin 
Leaf psalms and yet we cannot grieve
Though dancing seasons come and leave. 
The things our constant God renews, 
Revived by endless morning dews. 
Only the heart does not grow old,  
Beating boldly at sights bright cold. 
Mind’s light sparks with passion’s sighs 
When earth under white blankets lies. 
Some weep, some smile and some now wise, 
Know endless roads rise to sapphire skies. 
Tomorrow’s spring: May knows the same – 
Of Love’s face, soul’s grace, and fickle fame. 
No soaring lyrics can song express 
What the heart has heard, none can guess. 
For bold lighted man is born to rise 
Beyond fall’s vivid ever-changing skies. 
************************ 
Christmas – by W. R. Griffin 
Did it happen as they say?
A child, divine, born in hay, 
Descended from a line of kings, 
Manifesting the creator of all things. 
Were there shepherds in a field, 
Watching flocks of sheep, to keep 
Them safe, only to be blinded, to yield  
To an army of angels in the sky, 
Telling them not to fear, and why? 
A savior, they said, was born that hour 
To save mankind from Satan’s power. 
A mystery, a conundrum, a paradox – 
Hegemony – until mankind unlocks 
Its own chains; An eternal test: 
Saecula, saeculorum, scripturus est!  
************************** 
Mentor - By W. R. Griffin  
How does one thank
The chef who cleans and pits 
The peach, removes the blemishes 
And bruises from beneath; 
Leaves the juices full, allows 
The aging essences to mellow, 
Knowing just right when’s ripe? 
We serve our fruits lush to all who crave. 
Serve with flourishes, garnishments, 
With music, trumpets – and all praise – 
A rich bouquet of flavors and your compliments. 
Whitman wrote – In the teacher’s eyes, 
Proof is when the students rise - like cream. 
No one grasps a star, reaches or dwells 
Higher than on the shoulders of a dream,  
Where, through you, our poem never dies. 
Lifted into your learned journeyed skies!  
And, higher still we’ll be – come our farewells! 
************************* 
First Kiss – by W. R. Griffin
First kiss – yet Eden’s garden was a dream –
Satan’s serpent sought her ripe mouth to bruise 
Forbidden skin, a sin beguiling ruse.  
Adam slept alone – She, the serpent’s scheme.  
God’s given mate, his rib – her knowing eyes, 
With sunlit air around her, hair abeam – 
Low lash gazes in glowing sunsets seem  
A soft shaded world to seek, that turns lies. 
First kiss. This foolish man God did not wake,  
Nor did her salt tears wedge his lids apart,  
But cast out into darkness of the heart.  
Thus mankind is plagued; still we’re all the same 
Blinded by her life’s light he can’t forsake. 
Love costs him all, yet he still calls her name. 
************************** 
Dissolution - By W. R. Griffin  
When we dissolved, resolved our one –
Final, yet never final, final tears – 
Ending ended, done but never done 
Lives over, yet not, bending 20 years 
Pale gem grown weak, old stone cold,  
now only kisses in a dry fragmented dream  
I did not see the end now ended, but twice told 
Black and white, dim light on a silent retro screen. 
Coffee alone, gone, at home each morning 
Dark, rancid, thick, yes - bitter in a dirty cup 
there – there, that was, that was my warning  
Words once said, never dead; but thrown up  
Neither either speaks the other’s name;  
only lists of needing things teeth spoken.  
Some say it will be fine, others, it’s a shame. 
Broken is a trite dark word - but it was broken. 
Give it a year, a year – then, then you’ll see,  
This knelling, telling toll, shrill, still in my ear;  
you’ll live, you’ll live, they say, they say to me 
some day, some day, they say, it will be clear. 
They know, they know and yet they don’t,  
I don’t know to know, and never will 
long, long I have not, and still, still I won’t,  
But, yes – had I listened then, I might listen still.  
************************** 
The squinty face - by W. R. Griffin
My mirror shows a squinty face
Where once a bright-eyed youth 
Stuck out his tongue, flew into space, 
Pulled out his broken tooth. 
The squinty face seems out of time 
Not the shallow kid 
A metered verse that doesn’t rhyme,  
An elegy from his id.  
The squinty face still dreams at nights 
Still hears a youthful name 
Imagined heights, now lowered lights, 
Echoes in halls of fame. 
Mirror man’s got a fallback plan 
Playing it all by ear. 
Now he gets by as best he can, 
Knows more of love than fear. 
************************** 
First Sigh Brings Winter - By W. R. Griffin
The sough of russet, fragile leaf
From breezy whisper, easy thief 
On night-wing wisp is too soon lost 
Gossamer jeweled in ghostly frost. 
Slight blush of hushed, reddened gold 
Hues out to edge on grassy wreath. 
Last light and dance come naked cold; 
Blanket the ground and all beneath. 
The must of weedy, seedless thatch 
From crisp, once vivid, vibrant patch 
Is stemmed at the hem; wetted white, 
Firmed and set one frigid night. 
This billow blankets yard to yard 
On water spellbound, iron hard.  
It coats on Spruces, crusts on Pines 
Bends the branches with tufts on tines. 
Feather froth, yet a frigid host 
Transforms to vivid, wind swept ghost 
Field, hollow, hill and forest keep. 
A wintry landscape; a downy sweep. 
************************* 
Good Fences - By W. R. Griffin
It is a hundred yards of steel
Between me, the night and all it brought 
With turf chalk markings on the ground 
The murmured, whispered toothy sound  
Enclaves where youth heat dark sought 
Chest bump, head thump, acting tough 
Gang talk, group sex, and stealing stuff 
The early, surly primal twitchy urge 
The flesh-to-flesh, the push, the gush 
Why wait, too late, get grunt, let surge 
To dog, to mutt, the primal rut, the rush 
The airy wafting need of weed alight 
In the blurry, slurry, earthy night 
And popping junk to feel the reeling hush 
Cop car passes in a hurried, flurried shush. 
They’ll break free, they say to rule the day 
What they want, or feel; a boasting bray. 
They’ll more likely find a home 
With junkies, thugs and thieves alone 
Outside the halls they want,  inside  
The walls they don’t and won’t 
Rise to the throne they feel is theirs 
With a single finger raised, all defied. 
Acting tough, to rip, run and rally 
On their turf – but in my alley 
Where they hide. Where they deride. 
I wire, I hammer, I nail, I lift, and bend. 
Yes, Frost is right. 
A good fence makes a good friend. 
************************* 
Fireflies - By W. R. Griffin
A Honeysuckle summer evening hillside breeze,
Whispered to our Willows and the Walnut trees. 
Wafting through our yard down to the river, 
A cooling wake that made us dance and shiver.  
We ran, caught and put in jars every glowing firefly, 
As Poppa, in his cutoff khakis, leaned back into his chair, 
His eyes glazed, his face tilted toward the evening sky, 
Beer on his breath, tattoos on his arms, and wind in his hair. 
His stout body strained the chair’s plaid plastic bands,  
Stretched and squeaked with each twitching shift of its frame. 
On his forearm, etched in Japanese, each of us by name,  
On his chest was sketched two mythic gods of exotic lands. 
He’d say he wondered what the poor folk were doing,   
His children’s lilting laughs – both then and now – ensuing,  
And, still these memories light in my mind’s eye, reviewed,  
As if it were yesterday, so sharp, each scene renewed. 
Bright images of that balmy night, forever keep 
To dance in the mind’s sky, a myriad stars alight – 
Fireflies for my children’s children when I sleep 
Through an endless star-filled, summer night. 
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An angel in the Night - By W. R. Griffin
I dreamed an angel in the night,
Took me with burning heart’s desire. 
Her hair was black, her eyes were white, 
With opal breasts transcendent bright, 
To lands of ice and lakes of fire. 
I dreamed an angel in the night. 
My angel rose through dark to light, 
Her mythic wings stroking a lyre. 
Her hair was black, her eyes were white. 
My angel roused alluring height, 
In ardent trance replete, entire.  
I dreamed an angle in the night. 
My angel soared in blazing flight,  
With mystic notes the God’s admire 
Her hair was black, her eyes were white. 
We sensed the sublime, yet recondite, 
Pandora’s whims like a centaur’s sire. 
I dreamed an angel in the night. 
Her hair was black, her eyes were white. 
************************** 
Sin Samba Salsa - By W. R. Griffin 
Bells toll the hour - spires pierce the azure blue, pointing, praying.
Contrapuntal to the rhythmic undulation and the heat of couples swaying to a Latin beat – brown glistening fleshy hue in music and passion’s bend. Musky, fragrant bodies, samba salsa swaying and saying - there is no end. 
Beggars tout their wares as women hold babies and chatter like rustling leaves. Their men sing the songs of sweat and needs – their music drowned in rusty rain - The sounds of doing what they do or bleed to fill the space and days between, As uniformed nuns in blue and white smile and laugh at this summer play, and look away
– their lives handed to Padre Dios to keep them safe from pain.
– their lives handed to Padre Dios to keep them safe from pain.
The whispering feet, circling sweet, shuffling sounds pulse, repeat. 
Young and old meld to the music lost in yellowed haze
And cracking memories of days when their bodies moved
As one on heated winds and passion’s tone, when breath wisps away - All earthly care in dreams and sweat-wrapped limbs.
No sinners, nor saints are here - just salsa to a rhythm of its own.
And cracking memories of days when their bodies moved
As one on heated winds and passion’s tone, when breath wisps away - All earthly care in dreams and sweat-wrapped limbs.
No sinners, nor saints are here - just salsa to a rhythm of its own.
******************************* 
Eden Lost – By W. R. Griffin 
I yearn to breathe the blackest dirt and richest green,
Of fescue and earth under bare feet - and between my toes, 
To bathe in crystal rocky splashing sheen – an Eden retreat, 
Where only, keen sensed, the wildest creature goes – 
Lapping the founts before the stain of darkest spoils fill  
God’s rain and turn the source of life into a poisoned swill. 
I am the salamander - the toad in grass – musty and wet. 
I live and breathe the same as all but sooner pass – 
Murdered by this slow drip of nature’s blood, less red, and yet 
Turned to carrier of all the glutton’s refuse until dead. 
I am the canary, the last breath before the miner falls – 
I am Troy and Rome, the fatted calf and crumbling walls. 
Eden’s chance has long since gone as do Eve and Adam  
Lay in silent dust – and thus man’s grandiose and greatest turn  
To acid rust – while tattered tomes of wisdom mildew and rot – 
The answers to all perplexing and yet the final question’s not – 
What have we done with all that God hath gave, 
That has turned once a paradise into our common grave. 
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Blood and Oil - By W. R. Griffin   
Our universe is bleeding black and brown
The richest blood of ages from dark graves  
Beneath an ocean – slow - in killing waves – 
Turning ripe orchards into salted ground. 
It is the blood of all that lived until 
The heavens opened and God’s hammer 
Gouged a hole that filled with pernicious greed. 
And Babel rose again vociferous and shrill. 
Cains kill Abels for the world’s thirst 
To put the blood of ages’ powers first 
And make a golden idle from this blood 
Breath and thought now choked with bowel’s mud. 
A child asks, “What is this place?” And we say, 
It is where once we watched the sea and sky 
At the end of summer’s day - where life thrived 
Amid the bulrush and the verdant reed – 
And, now it’s where our hubris costs us 
All that we can bleed.  
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Now, The Past – by W. R. Griffin 
It is here; and will not leave this room –
A dance macabre dream fills my blighted womb. 
It rises from our darkest night;  
From icy loves to hates burning white, 
It screams and writhes in cold gray truths – 
The past – our past - is alive and loose. 
We dread, we grieve our bygone 
But like amanitas it seedy grows. 
It settles in each stretching yawn – 
Each Destroying Angel shows. 
Each path we choose our shadows last 
Because the past binds us; holds us fast. 
With tempest’s force, the past turns and twists; 
Distorting drifts and day-struck mists;   
The scroll of then becomes new lies 
Scribed from distant blinking eyes. 
A steadfast knot binds our past – 
It will forever and ever last – it is alive and loose. 
Past has not passed, but now is gone soon, 
As each sun hides its face from a rising moon. 
We dance, sing and cry out our closed diary. 
We thoughtlessly weave, warp this last tapestry. 
Each thread, weft, and cross in our final trial 
Is a clarion trumpet or the tomb’s muted denial. 
************************ 
My Kids - by W. R. Griffin
I wish I could be back in those delivery rooms,
And start again – but this is now, and that was then. 
So many yesterdays, but I can still see you Kevin  
Crowning, with an umbilical chord trying to choke you  
To death, but quick, deft doctor’s hands gave you breath  
To scream your arrival to the rooftops - echoes down hallways.  
And, you Allison, cut from your mother’s stomach,  
A C-Section emergency – as I watched – my quick glances  
As sharp as bayonets, poised with a focus I had not  
Seen nor felt since firing at and being fired upon, while 
Crouched, looking over the edge of a rooftop in Saigon. 
The crusty nurse yells, “If you faint you lie where you fall,
”I shot back,  “Watch them, and them alone and that is all!”  
I see you both clearly, three years apart, each rosy pink,
In glass bassinettes, your fists shaking at the lights and –  
I imagine – at life: I, aware – and yet not – to be there 
To help you through all your crying nights and fits of pique. 
I see you both, so grown, so much of me, so much of you,
Your mom, your grandpas, nanas - their eyes and smiles, too.
Faces in faded photos, a montage, yet you unique, so bright.
Faces in faded photos, a montage, yet you unique, so bright.
Warm suns and moons have glowed, and shaded you with a prism’s blush. 
We try, yet we fail, we rush and yet so much is far beyond our sight.
We ask, what turns our fate? What drives us in joy or a stunned hush?
We ask, what turns our fate? What drives us in joy or a stunned hush?
And I gladly nod to any or all religions’ gods or God above.
For proved is proof, we are shaped, now or late, by love. 
***************************
To A Child Now Grown - By W. R. Griffin 
Oh, that I could hear again that cry –
Your shrill charge into this indifferent world, 
And, ask again – why I did not fully comprehend 
The weight of your waiving banner yet unfurled, 
Your clear clarion call to arms around you curled, 
And ply my course safe before life’s sins to mend. 
Now you’re near the age I was then when you were born, 
And aching echoes all my life from brassy sorrow’s horn. 
You are now the adult I so much hoped you’d be, 
Shaped by the greater winds - divine and destiny. 
Carved by so many streams beyond my meager lands,  
And all the rainbow brush strokes of eager, artful hands. 
And, beyond this late rocky ledge before my fate, 
You’ve tilled the field from fallow to greener great, 
I have learned again how life is not some simple straight,  
That all the stars in heaven will not guide us to a gloried fate. 
But, if I have lifted you a simple single step above, 
Then proved is proof – we’re shaped - now or late, by love.  
************************* 
Hang Ups - by W. R. Griffin 
 
In the darkness they conspire –
Malevolent bent wire. 
Their goal is my frustration 
As they repel their separation. 
In lines circumscribed and neat, 
Closed closeted – they meet! 
Wrapped, entwined and clustered – 
My coat and I – now flustered. 
Whether plastic, wood or metal 
Their battle plan is to unsettle. 
And with mute duplicity, 
Their favorite target – me! 
If God is in high realm, 
And firmly at His helm, 
Then they must be in The Plan – 
Revenge for Eden to punish man. 
******************************* 
God’s People - by W. R. Griffin 
I think The Lord makes funny people,
Because the rest quite bore him. 
So, when you deride a homonym 
Watch out for a falling steeple.
 
If “off the rack” is what you are 
Don’t flail at quirky-made. 
While average man may set the bar, 
That’s not all God hath bade. 
The world is full of quirky things 
To liven up the rest. 
Unless you’re perfect and have wings 
Then far you are from best. 
Whether Biblical or Freudian 
We come in many shapes. 
We’ve traveled far to where we are, 
Still some folks think like apes. 
Sinners, preachers – the lot of us 
Every diverse form yet named: 
From bees to swans – hippopotamus – 
Odd or not – all creatures God proclaimed. 
************************** 
Scorched Earth - by W. R. Griffin 
She rocked in the swing in evening air.
The reeling, rusty chains grating  
With each word as the links scraped  
The hooks screwed into the porch ceiling.   
I stared at some feint early stars – 
Each syllable she spoke is still heard. 
When I left the company, she said, 
She knew nothing would be right. 
Then she left with them and a family  
Turned to ashes; bamboo dead. 
A soprano’s fiery aria that burned – 
Napalmed in a monsoon night. 
And, she was right, nothing was the same. 
I was not there – much more than miles – 
To see my children, blankets curled. 
I was not there each time they  
Posed with their same smiles, 
Caught in a three by five world. 
I was not there when they laughed  
Their first loves and buried their eyes  
Into secret pillows with each loss. 
A life of moss-covered stories;  
Each ephemeral sight made of air 
And light, but she was right.   
I sat each ringing, ticking day 
In dim yellow light, listening  
To the air passing away; bathing me. 
Glistening horns and distant sirens  
Wailed a name, and, yes, she was right, 
Nothing was the same.  
A friend came the next glowing night 
To say my father was gravely ill. 
We had talked before this sad height 
To hear a cold had turned to worst.  
I said, I love you Dad for I think the first  
Time I could remember. And, yes she was right.  
Nineteen years, nine months and sixteen days 
From the end back to the start. 
About which nothing was she not right, 
That could not have changed my heart? 
************************* 
Odyssey of the Nightingales - by W. R. Griffin 
The Nightingale sails his silken barque
With his wife SoignƩe and their young 
Over Lake Long Gaze under Rainbow’s Arc,  
To the dazzling ports of Song Sung. 
Where winged lions glide, horned eagles sweep, 
And scarlet fireflies beam. 
Cherubim learn the bold rhythmic leap – 
Golden unicorns prance in a dream. 
The cargo hold swells with rich villanelles  
Sonnets, elegies in burgeoning troves,   
Rare as the Kingdom of Kells,  
Silver-spotted gazelles – 
Mythic Bresil with its emerald coves. 
Surviving the swells, white caps and rocks  
In each port this lush cornucopia docks, 
Natives proclaim Un carnaval d'exotique. 
With lexicon jugglers, wordsmiths and smugglers – 
Festivals de poĆØmes fantastiques. 
All blithe poems soar in oneiric flight  
Seeking the supreme paean home. 
Sailing the seas to empyrean height  
Their blazing guides fill endless skies every night, 
Over Byzantium, Athens, and Rome. 
*************************** 
A Sonnet Every Sunrise - by W. R. Griffin 
 
With rhyme, be bold yet gild the lining pause.
Strike keen the sheen-faced blankest paging whim, 
And make the terse - this tower - chant the cause. 
Transform all murmured humdrum into hymn. 
Make glad or sad your brightest beauty chime, 
For heaven here or sparkling afterlife. 
Strain the shell, but abate unworthy time, 
Weave silken lilt of quilted rhyming strife. 
To be, or not - when soaring songs strive true - 
Then swift the aim of hand and eye come right. 
Let worthy words come forth from depths in you, 
To capture all your angels in starlight. 
Jupiter’s searing bolt affirms it so. 
Decreed: Each dawn these golden stars will glow. 
************************** 
Epiphany - by W. R. Griffin 
I listen to the sound of a straight down rain.
Today there is no percussion, only gentle strings. 
Cymbals, drums and the blare of brass are missing. 
I hear only low and distant whispers; a waltz of memories. 
Yesterday, the flash and clash of duties done 
Eclipsed the velvet song of earth and heaven.  
Now a pastoral symphony rises from the winds and reeds   
And the deeds of breathing are now breezes singing. 
Gray skies are nature’s compromise; diminuendo –   
A flowing coda – animato to adagio – softly on a solo clarinet. 
My chorus chants: It's better late than never. 
As this Opus ends, I have become the ground I will inhabit. 
************************* 
Sojourner - by W. R. Griffin 
I have turned from frenzied, anxious ride,
To two-lane through my eventide. 
Onto sweet country roads I rise, I glide 
By muddy farms, ruddy barns where silos rust, 
Emitting grainy essences and manure-warmed must. 
Beams split-light this residue, powdered soft – 
Earthen smells that breathe alive, aloft. 
Along my quiet lane, pruned ash and pin oaks strain, 
Distorted, to the soothing mother sky for rain, 
And my arthritic hands implore the universe for grace. 
Here where the curve of ice crisp, edges streams that race. 
And snow has covered placid pools in awakened dream. 
Icy breezes brush bucolic eyes and moist nostrils steam, 
Where winded fields stretch and meld into the rising hue; 
Eternal sentries spin and fixed truths dance in starlit view. 
Till me back into this blackest, soothing soil and plow 
Where toil is ended and life is firmer than ephemeral now – 
Where everything interred exists again while heaven glows,  
And my last breath becomes a frozen epitaph amid the rows. 
************************** 
 
November Corn  - by W. R. Griffin 
The stalks stand straight,
close-cropped and dried, 
burnished in the setting gold. 
Their fruits now stripped 
and scattered wide,  
to shudder in the early cold. 
The shoots strain and cling 
to dry crackling roots,  
await the slow approach 
of the plowman’s boots: 
the plowshare’s singing ring— 
Oh, that final, grinding blow! 
Teams of beasts rock 
West to East; the shocks 
fall crisply left and right. 
The fodder’s felled, 
the stacks soon swelled, 
and the plowing ends at night. 
The field now cleared – 
An earthy stubbled beard – 
awaits deep winter’s snow.  
For spring’s young sun, 
when the dying’s done, 
to rise with a dawning glow. 
Then, June, be green,  
sweep the morning clean, 
your leaves to break the winter’s fast. 
What was cut down rebirths this ground. 
All that’s new affirms the past. 
************************* 
The Web of Time - by W. R. Griffin  
When humankind looks up, it will find
A glimpse of immortality, 
A glance of all divine, and refuse -  
The Trapping Web of Time. 
Beyond ourselves, above the fray, 
Lays possibility, a transcendent, noble realm,  
Where poetry and prosaic tomes, ripe wombs  
Brightly dwell, with music, art;    
All high, lofty, soaring songs 
That swell toward heaven’s gates  
And raise our spirits from the primal nod, 
Away from - The Trapping Web of Time. 
Unbend from death unto the limitless  
And cosmic hall - undo man’s fall.  
Rise up! Reverse the turn from mind,  
Unwind - The Trapping Web of Time. 
Look up! Look up unto the myriad stars,  
Dispute decline, incline instead  
To reach with head, heart, hands and minds;  
Lift our spirits from the human state  
Toward infinity, close to all sublime -  
And escape - The Trapping Web of Time. 
Reach out! Reach out!  
Let human hands exceed their grasp! 
Rebuke Eden’s rout, the sneering asp,  
Replant! Replant the apple’s pod  
To lightly touch the eyes, and heart of God, 
To end - The Trapping Web of Time.  
********************************* 
Shi Shi - by W. R. Griffin 
Helen’s hair, Diana’s grace,
Darkened eyes, cherubic face, 
Bolshoi lithe and Grecian hind – 
Ethereal spirit but puerile mind. 
He sees a saccharin sensuous sprite 
Long absent from his dream-swept night 
She softly crosses the hardwood floor 
The meal is ended, but he’d like more. 
She stacks the detritus of cold meals 
Smiles and spins on lilting heels  
His eyes reflect her quick pirouette,  
And capture her firmed and rounded set;  
Her willowy arm, white linen drape, 
Breezy wafted downy nape. 
She’s lightly placed the billet there, 
He lifts it in light; returns his chair 
As the open sign dies another day, 
And darkens the empty chairs array. 
He pays; daydreams of long gone loves. 
Later, she leaves in wrap and gloves. 
So soon she spoons in waning light; 
Love’s sisters held in affection’s night. 
He leans in a steaming shower stall;   
Watching time, soap and wishes fall. 
************************** 
Hobo - by W. R. Griffin 
I was maybe seven or eight
When a man came on the porch 
And asked my Dad for some food. 
My father fixed beans, ham and bread,  
Leaned down and said,  
Don't stare, my son, it's rude. 
The man ate as if the world would burn, 
The plate tucked against his chin. 
He’d sop, scoop and shove 
The beans into his mouth then grin. 
Dad said, my son, pride goes before the fall, 
But, being poor is not a sin. 
My father said the man had  
Not a dime to spare. 
I watched him eat as no one eats, 
If food is always there. 
His coat was dirty double breasted; 
His pants had cuffs and pleats. 
Food smells mixed with sweat soaked 
Clothes wafted in on summer air. 
My father smiled and asked the man, 
As he returned the plate,  
I hope you got enough to eat. 
The man said thanks, 
It was the best I ever ate. 
************************* 
Echoes - by W. R. Griffin 
She slouches in a metal chair
Under a beach umbrella,  
At a rusting table outside  
A bustling coffee shop. 
A slim lipstick-stained  
Cigarette teeters between  
Her fingers; her manicured  
Nails are a matching blood red. 
Her graying blond hair is  
Rolled up tightly and comb-clamped.  
Staccato coughing interrupts her haughty air. 
Her furtive glances spark memories of Miami days,  
Melancholy reminiscing in a wafting smoky haze.  
Her eyes are a universe away.  
At other tables, smiling couples lean close,  
Breathe easy – he’s and she’s wi-fi’d to a  
World now theirs – high def’d, digitally-reduced  
to a single dimension. 
A redhead with tight jeans and shapely ass sits  
Pert and high, smiling at her table-mate. 
He pretends to listen, but a wry smile and  
Downward glances betray his real interests;  
Her loosened buttons, full-fleshed blouse. 
Three feet away, but 40 years apart,  
The lady pains a memory of a man once-loved.  
She draws a startled breath, snaps stiff,  
And puts her hand upon once firm and glowing breasts.  
A rigid grimace – we will know eclipses her face. 
******** 
The Last Room - by W. R. Griffin  
Demigods have deigned four rooms in life –
We grow, we learn, we task and then we wait 
In the last room, for a chain of rain-dark nights, 
To ask when lies this hollow, abandoned shell. 
Unseen straps confine to this hellish place. 
Wind whines, rain calls, and seeks your face. 
There can be no paintings on these deaf, sterile walls, 
No bright breathing ache of spring, no dashing 
Dance of ribbons, no rainbow of children singing; 
No ringing sounds, no scent of vibrant root or leaf. 
They are left behind in previous stalls. There is 
Only the pulsing heart and whispered chants – 
Of those in haste who set the days as they divine 
That some blind god has chosen. 
The waiting ones are told to seize all thought by 
Cadaver gods in sardonic masks of white, 
To go gentle into their night; to bear their 
Waiting stare; to depart on eased blood, to 
Spark no flame, nor break the narrowed straits, 
To make for pleased and patient waits, and 
Relieve the burden of their urgent lives. 
It would be a sweeter cup of water’s kindness 
To place those who wait on an ice-flow – adrift 
In snow; swift to journey all white barren seas 
And quiet, calmly, blind-mindless freeze. 
******************** 
The Blave Sang Twillig - by W. R. Griffin   
“Gorple dang,” the Blave he sang
As the womper doff and fro 
The wallagg clumb the stouty vale 
As the gloomin dowdy go 
Zander clame, the gorfull snout 
Snorfing mon and oot 
To worple blay the brillen bowt 
Til wondo doon and boot  
Wane ull zit bee, Wane willit doh 
Err whampet blorflo whip 
Ipple fran the billen moh 
Wal manfray sully flip 
En oonen noo en moren too 
Iz manny framen soon 
Forp ullen al, the toolin val 
En urb en nigh the loon. 
Til oonder momp and oonder zoh 
Bove snaa fin erren gleye 
Ahlen be, oot Alhen zee 
En til the banfray fly. 
***************** 
Mindless - by W. R. Griffin 
 
Babble we, and babble he,
When falls the end of day. 
Chaff whirls with might,  
A frightful sight,  
on our floor of wicked clay: 
It’s abstraction’s sneering glee. 
Open door upon the moor 
Beholds a stunning moon 
The moods run hot, the mullein rot 
As numbing chord lines tune;  
It’s abstraction’s laughing loon. 
The move to glean now blindly seen 
An echo distant dark 
The hippo steed is all we need, 
Abstraction kills the muted lark. 
A smell’s a sound, a sound’s a smell, 
In a void none occupies. 
Abstraction cracks its silent bell, 
And speaks through unseen eyes. 
****************************** 
Out of Time - by W. R. Griffin  
In the mirror, I see a stranger’s face,
A stranger’s dark eyes, in a strange dark place. 
I breathe; I walk through this transient air, 
But, to youth I’m ephemeral; I am not there. 
Youth reflects not my face nor my altering form, 
As they run to the eye of each gathering storm. 
They hear not the sounds of my echoing heels, 
I hear – they ignore – time’s turning wheels. 
Vines now entwine my once youthful throne. 
Dark briers and thorns pierce to the bone. 
It’s true, “When you are old,” everything dies  
And, words from your soul – are treated as lies. 
While “An aged man is but a paltry thing,  
A tattered coat upon a stick, unless  
Soul clap its hands and sing, and louder sing 
For every tatter in its mortal dress.” 
This glory once from graying sage, 
Has waned on cracking, darkened stage, 
Still, I will sing my song of every thread,  
Heading Yeats and will not be dead! 
***************** 
Bob - Bobbie God - by W. R. Griffin 
Has God, I wonder, ever had a first name?
Just a thought – though perhaps it’s oddly profane. 
But He/She’s in charge of this vast universe, 
And, if I digress, the place sure could be worse. 
Knowing a first name might give us an edge, 
A doorbell to ring, or even a wedge— 
To open God’s eyes, and cut through the din,   
To erase this nonsense too often called “sin”? 
Yahweh, Vishnu, Allah, Roberta, or Bob, 
Just saying - Hey, you up there! You’ve got a rough job! 
Seems too impersonal and not quite polite 
An infinite being must have a name that’s just right. 
So give me a hint, and I’ll go away 
To kneel on a hillside and fervently pray:  
“Dear Bob - Bobbie God, let’s both confess: 
Your world and my life are a god-awful mess. 
But if you’d only nod, or just wink your eye,  
Perhaps this “Good” thing would be worth a try. 
******** 
Sunday Dinner - by W. R. Griffin 
Packed in tight, we’d fidget and fight,
Four brothers in the backseat. 
In a borrowed car, it wasn’t far, 
Through the sweaty August heat. 
Above the engine’s roar and squeaking springs, 
We’d shout, and sing and clap. 
Pressed and dressed in our Sunday best, 
With our sister on Momma’s lap. 
Down a dusty rural route,  
The car rolled over grizzled rock. 
Uncle Lawrence swung open the weathered gate, 
That had a harness for a lock. 
We busted free when the doors popped wide, 
We ran to the barns and sheds. 
Dad shouted, “Stay close or I’ll tan your hides, 
And smack the back of your heads.” 
Nine cats in the hay, three dogs in the dirt, 
Uncle Lawrence milked a cow. 
The bucket twanged with every spurt, 
And, we took turns learning how. 
He’d spray the cats when they’d draw near, 
Their mouths meowing wide. 
They’d lap and lick their fur milky thick, 
We wanted to hold them but they’d hide. 
Aunt Marguerite made a ton to eat, 
Uncle Lawrence churned ice cream. 
Thick icy sweet, head aching treat, 
Like the feast we’d often dream. 
Chicken, beef and pork packed on a fork, 
Our mouths stuffed bulging tight. 
Aunt Marguerite’s culinary feats, 
We ate and laughed ‘til night. 
Now they’ve both gone to Glory’s dawn, 
Each walked a double path. 
They tilled two fields, each brought rich yields: 
She ran the school and he taught math. 
******************************
Bubba Cat - by W. R. Griffin
Dedicated to Irish Poet Eileen Casey 
Our Bubba is a beefy cat,
Some twenty pounds and more, 
A mound of fur and padding fat, 
Slouched sanguinely on the floor. 
Silky stretch accordion,  
Imposing in full stride, 
He unravels – a living Gordian 
With yawning chasm wide. 
He pads stealthily upon the bed, 
Crouches without noise, 
Stares then lowers his mighty head 
To pounce on mousy toys. 
Bubba is a mystic that 
Sees what humans miss, 
Seer, psychic, swami cat, 
Conundrum with a hiss. 
Tiger kitty, burning bright, 
He stares at points unknown, 
Tilted head, cross-eyed sight- 
Your pillow, now his throne. 
Prowess firm, his name renowned, 
Unchallenged in castle house, 
Bubba’s furrowed brow is crowned!   
He’s the bane of rat and mouse. 
****************** 
Westy - by W. R. Griffin 
Royal recliner – King Rudyard the First,
Friend to the diner, just give him your wurst! 
He thinks he’s an Airedale, a terrier, a Dane, 
A bruiser, a boxer – a dispenser of pain. 
His stands ever ready, a snarling rebel, 
He thinks he’s a boulder, when he’s only a pebble. 
No pig-scaring wolf, though he huffs and he puffs; 
Still, he knows he’s a scion, descendant of toughs. 
His ears stand like sentries, his sonar probes down, 
divining your meaning, in your smile or your frown. 
His head twists and turns, brown eyes piercing stare, 
As he’s poised for the pounce on the edge of your lair. 
The cats all disdain him, try as he might, 
Aloof, they ignore him – they won’t even fight. 
Much sniffing and whiffing; tails wag and they wisp,  
Bessie hisses, throat-growling – Bubba mews – with a lisp! 
He woofs, and he yips at the slightest of things 
footsteps outside or the beating of wings. 
When evening turns quiet and the TV is off 
He knows it is time to ascend to the loft. 
He springs to a pillow, and bounds on the bed, 
Grinning and barking – then he settles his head. 
Surreptitiously squinting, one ear’s cocked upright, 
Fear not mortal humans!  – Rudy’s primed for the fight. 
********************************** 
Raccoon - by W. R. Griffin 
She’s older, meaner than was likely thought
And, bested bigger thieves than wisely ought;  
Her sharp memory and nature’s mask outlast; 
Pains forged in empty den and wounds of past. 
Bold mates have ceased pursuits in fitful dreams. 
Her weaned and wary kits ford other streams.  
Intent to snatch a crawfish from the mud – 
And dines upon its marrow, bones and blood. 
When packs of dogs seek out her toughened hide 
She wily, ranging rides the mountainside. 
Blue Tick and Beagle,gangly Airedales strive - 
In vain to tree and burn this witch alive. 
But, in the dim dusk-light they’re far behind. 
Barking a brier bush and do not find 
Her cloaked bandit eyes darting cunning keen, 
Hard-honed to parry any hunter seen. 
Until she’s dead and legs to ashes turn, 
Fury’s fires, her hatred’s hearth will burn, 
And memories branded - soul-seared - will outlast – 
Eclipsing all but darkest pains of past. 
******************* 
Ad Infinitum - by W. R. Griffin 
 
My soul is damned, my mind askew,
A thousand thoughts descend 
Of love and hate, birth and death 
Infinity’s - the end 
Of Life an anvil, sledge and fist 
The body twists, He molds 
Gnarled, jagged, bent and torn 
He tempers all till cold 
God’s hammer strikes, and heated hands 
Shape, mold incessantly 
And, on again, to forge and sculpt 
Until at last we’re free. 
******************************** 
The Constipated Pen - by W. R. Griffin    
What can you expect of a pen that loves its ink?
Unable to deliver lines and words we think.  
Brave upon the page, earnest, deftly sage.  
Self love in creativity constipates - like age.  
It's not like a baker, cake-maker, chef or cook,  
Although, fruits of all creations do inspire, flow syntax.  
Put down the pen this hour - devour someone else’s book.  
Then in quiet interlude, closeted solitude – relax. 
***************** 
Age of Innocence - by W. R. Griffin 
You do not know it's pain
Until it stops 
Perpetual becomes a norm 
 
Silence becomes a scream
 
Shattering the night 
 
With a single light  
Of new thought 
Reality rises
 
And, truth deafens 
 
Eyes long open, see
 
And tears, long streaming,  
Cease 
In endless drought
 
Knowing turns sleep to stark blaring,  
Burning understanding
 
You are no longer a child
 
Lost innocence erupts 
 
Adult numbness consumes
 
You do not know it's pain 
 
Until it stops. 
*************************** 
Man of Harlech - by W. R. Griffin 
 
Father born of fire and ice,
In hell's kitchen and war-flung flame 
Tempered by a strife-filled life,  
And Ireland's cherished name 
Man of Harlech in death's ranks,  
With sword in scabbard's sheath 
We gently lay a garland of flowers,  
As stillness is your wreath 
Where once was thunder now is still,  
Where once a laugh now cry 
For such intensities of heart,  
So quick in stillness lie 
Man of might and fiercest rage,  
Yet poet's lilting word 
Even as in shrouded realm,  
Our lives, your life is heard 
The hand that held my hand now gone,  
The voice that rafters rang 
Is stilled but we shall carry on,  
In our lives, yours is sang 
And as we see our children's eyes,  
We gently see your smile 
And as we sing your Celtic song,  
We feel you near a while 
Now gentle into night you've gone,  
No longer rage, nor strife 
Your children celebrate your soul,  
And sing to all your life 
**************************** 
To Benedict XVI -- Holy Week 2010 - by W. R. Griffin 
Two thousand years of Roman rule,
Hence the end comes in minutes – 
Upon the fetid winds of whim and nature,  
Corruption from within: 
From the miter’s missive that 
Men should shepherd men 
With divine indifference. 
Since the fisherman’s feet  
Stepped upon Christ’s rock, The Bridge 
Has spoken – said one with God – 
To cage its doves on religious roosts, 
To harness fealty with whips of words, 
And to fleece this flock with news  
Of sins and sorrows. 
The cloven hoof is prancing, 
As its master smiles content  
With knowing wiles that Man will be men,  
Not tethered to the cosmic center –  
Feasting primal on the muted lambs  
Of all those silent sheep. 
The sacrificial fires have turned the temple  
To Ozymandias. 
The perfect voice of the anointed  
Is now an echoing scream  
Caught in the sepulcher of flesh. 
*************************** 
Beckons the Evening Mountain Breeze - by W. R. Griffin 
Caught in bitter tangled brier
Soothed by lilting mournful lyre 
Stalking shadows muffled mute 
The sounds of baleful haunting lute 
Pulsing wind blown tearing tune 
From darkened hills to crescent moon 
Breezy bashful sun shown blush 
Full bloomed and languid lush 
Dewy downy dank and dusk 
Casting glow on row and husk 
Blue light longing lingers low 
Daylight fades in amber glow 
Rolling ridges ripe darkened rise 
Like rounded hips and willing thighs 
Wisps of darkened sullen sash 
On winded reedy thrilling thrash 
Rising tempest torment’s tide 
In hollow, hill and forest hide 
Becomes the west welled winding whist 
Herald of night and mother mist 
Fading veils of white and blue 
Give way to darkest covered hue 
On night-wing rests the sentry trees 
Beckons the evening mountain breeze 
Through growing film and burdened haze 
Echoes the wistful yesterdays 
Hills and hollows faintly haunt 
The migrant children tearful taunt 
Till our lost and youth return 
Winds call out with woeful yearn 
Seeking all that desperate left 
While lyre and lute the song bereft 
**************************** 
Christmas Anthology - by W. R. Griffin 
 
Christmas time in Appalachia
Rain and gray turn bitter cold and snow 
Rolling, craggy mountains reach again toward heaven 
Hard faces peering, longing, wind-whipped and seeking 
Scrabble, brush-lined hollers, mud and gravel road 
Lead to shack and double-wide, truck and plow. 
Children walking, windward leaning 
Coat clasped, voices keening 
Will there be much with meaning?  
This year? Ever? 
Leather faces, hollow-eyed and hiding youth,  
listening, hushed by the question and fearing hope 
Mines played out or filled with grinding behemoths 
Sucking soil and life, and leaving. 
Bright-eyed faces looking skyward singing 
Making wishes from television dreams, believing 
Prayers go up and out and never seem to come home 
Lost to the satellite prophets of Jerusalem and Rome. 
Snap-purse and heart in hand they barter breathe for bread 
While men weave lies on courthouse benches 
And, demigods sing again the Songs of Solomon 
To build an alter for themselves. 
Truth lies somewhere else in warmer souls 
With ringing hands and pounded breast 
They hunker down to exchange their sweat 
And give three pennies to an empty nest 
Corner, uniformed bands intone the season 
Bringing the money message without reason 
To fall on parched lips and poisoned ears 
Nevertheless receiving warm solace for their fears. 
And on and on the cycle spins like windmills grinding 
Churning out the refuse of man’s unbinding 
Belief, in spite of naked land and empty well 
Hard love, faint hope, for poets to tell. 
************************* 
River’s Edge - by W. R. Griffin 
 
Black ooze pulls at your feet, steals your shoes.
Legs coat with slimy paste and oily smell 
Crusting under summer sun. 
Slurping sounds with each precarious step; 
Zebco rod and reel on shoulder,  
Can of worms dug fresh and musty  
On the trek to river dwell. 
Muck, sand and weeds give way to boulder,   
Cloistered beach hidden under willow bend, 
A fishing sanctuary.  
Slate and shale skipping stones 
For flipping rippling river ripples. 
Only riverboats, catfish, carp watch you there. 
August heat, you swelter sweat and breathe sticky air. 
Chiggers, ticks, mosquitoes in this river jungle 
Itchy, scratchy blood suckers and tiny thicket thieves. 
Soaking, sitting, watching bobber for signs of strike 
Drifting eyes with the current and on imagination’s wind 
Solitary kingdom, broken only by the splashy dart of sunfish b 
In shallow stream. 
Breezes and the distant rumbling-chug of churning burden 
Plying northeastward toward the Monongahela, Susquehanna,
From the Big Sandy --Coal barges,
Against the current, Laden low and slapping water --
From the Big Sandy --Coal barges,
Against the current, Laden low and slapping water --
Spray spilling over blunt-bowed hulks, 
Polishing black rocks in the morning sun, 
To fire-up a hundred steel mills on thew river’s edge 
Or light a billion barns. 
Fiery furnaces distant from this wistful place, 
Where youth and nature blend in fading frame 
And this pained heart remembers -- 
The stuff of picnic talks and backyard yarns -- 
First catch and final days of innocence. 
***********************  
Ole Radio - by W. R. Griffin 
Splintered, hardwood boards
Creek under his pajama feet, 
Groan with the weight  
Of the night raider 
Steeling the old white plastic Philco  
From the cherry wood living-room table 
The winged one, next to the front door,  
Unbalanced, water-stained 
With eagles’ feet pinning giant glass marbles 
To the floor. 
The ragged plug pops from the sparking socket,  
And muffled feet retreat. 
Now under a faded ragged blanket, his face 
Glows, the dial light shows in wondrous eyes  
His ears seek that beyond horizon --   
His form casts shadows on the bedroom walls. 
Plugged into the world 
Beyond this tented hideaway -- 
Seeking sounds from outer space -- 
Tarzan, Lone Ranger and a mess of music 
Dorsey, Miller, Hank and Cline 
Mixed in a mottled, muffled montage, a cacophony 
A low symphony from somewhere, everywhere -- 
Detroit, New York, Chicago, Nashville. 
Where are these exotic places? 
The heat of glowing vacuum tubes warms his flesh and soul  
As his sweat beaded forehead strains to catch the world. 
Midnight magic carpet ride through “The Ether” -- 
Crashing to Earth with a roaring, bellowed thunder call: 
“Turn off that damned radio damn it and go to sleep.” 
Darkness and a smile connive the next Safari. 
******************************* 
Warrior Poet / Celtic Rose - by W. R. Griffin 
 
Battle bruised brooding warrior,
Home from clash and fray 
Standing on the rock-bound cove, 
Gray sea and bitter day. 
Wind-bitten glance upon the sky,  
Seeking solace found 
No tumult for the blood he’s shed,  
No cheers on halls abound. 
His sword is dulled and bloody streaked,  
The scabbard warn and old. 
The shield that shone is battered blunt,  
The eyes no longer bold. 
Staring wary, a weary search 
He scans for the sweet repose 
The raven hair and dark eyed smile  
Of his Celtic Princess Rose. 
The rough hewed hands,  
And callous grip seek the silken skin 
Of the fairy face and supple form,  
A spirit’s trance within. 
Broad shouldered steed on muddy ground,  
His hooves the pathway trod. 
Through blunt housed hovels,  
Barren fields and forest dark they plod. 
In search of all that light has made,  
And all that’s good in God. 
The spirit of all Ireland,  
From sky to rain soaked sod. 
Up the craggy hillside stretch 
And through the frigid stream 
Only the sound of clogging hooves,  
The flaring nostril’s steam -- 
To silhouette on ragged hill,  
In ancient rock-walled fort 
Where stillness now the cries of past,  
Now hushed is death’s retort. 
From fading sight an outline stands,  
The familiar, winsome face 
That haunted him in battled height, 
Returned him to this place. 
The torrent tousles auburn tress  
As she squints in the face of gale 
To glimpse the ruddy face  
Of he who sought the Holy Grail. 
His quest and plight away from her  
Had taken breath and bone. 
His sword and soul, his heart and hands 
Now hers and hers alone. 
Ten years she stood and stand she would  
Till the mountains tumbled down. 
Till seas dried up and sky turns red, 
Till a grayed head wore the crown. 
Through misty gaze, a smile soul deep, 
For whom her blood runs fair, 
The gilded miter glinted slight  
On her crown of fiery hair 
The rose blushed lips parted ivory peeks  
and speaks to warrior man: 
“I waited till all times had stopped  
and wait no more I can.” 
His throat now tight and slight spoke words,  
“I’m home for you,” he said 
“When all around me fought the fight,  
now all around are dead” 
“But words are waste at moments now,”  
His arms around her fold 
And he and she in one wrapped form,  
Will love till love is old. 
She,  the Druid goddess fair,  
The Celtic Rose he sought. 
He, the youth, once mighty arms,  
His battles now all fought. 
They, the spirit of Ireland’s shores,  
The whisper on every breeze. 
They, the souls that on darkened wind  
Live in the ancient trees. 
She the beauty and sweetness drink  
That quenches the soul’s dry thirst 
He, the brave and the sacrifice,  
Summoned to battle first. 
They, the king and the queen of fair,  
Who hunger for freedom’s caress. 
Now together forever be,  
In all time and tenderness. 
Her vigil kept, faith confirmed,  
Till her warrior would roam no more. 
He the blood and the breath we seek,  
The poet home from the war. 
******** 
A Passing - by W. R. Griffin 
Sadness, yet hope, fills the void
When life passes into night 
Or transitions out of youth 
Moving from boy to man, daughter to wife 
As leaf moves from green to burnished gold 
And, late falls to earth covered by silent snows 
Where marker mourns the life once led 
And speaks of sweetness lost 
Yet brighter light and passions - mind and soul 
Extend the life, in memories recalled 
And, in the eyes of children 
Reflecting and carrying the light they learned 
The candle passed, through mirrored mirrors 
Extends into infinity 
And through them, in an infinite line, we live forever 
And in them, we see the image of God. 
***************************** 
The Passing Peace - by W. R. Griffin 
As twilight dims and day fades slow
And night is hovering beyond last glow 
There is a passing of "The Peace" 
When breath is done and life must cease 
That comes from deep within one's heart 
Where God has dwelt, and been a part 
Of each and every waking thought 
For guidance, grace and wisdom sought 
And when fear's weakness takes control 
Faith is there to restore one's soul 
For "The Peace" passing understanding 
Fills the void on God's commanding 
Standing there beyond the vale 
Our Lord's hands cannot fail 
To catch us safe when silent sleep 
And in God's arms forever keep. 
******* 
Plow Days - by W. R. Griffin 
My plowing days draw short
Sun now closer to set than rise 
And yet I keep head bowed 
Blade breaking ground occupies 
Ever wary gaze for stones that cross my path 
Stopping my work or bringing my wrath 
I must finish the field and seeding 
And keep as best I can it from weeding 
So that my best of crop may grow and flourish 
Better on my mistakes to learn and nourish 
Too late, my quest, crusades now fade 
Life's forests and fields fall into shade 
With darkness of memories and regrets 
Sunrise too distant, nearer now sunset 
The pace is steady, firm and right 
And I will work into dark night 
From mission to see that what I plant 
Will be able to finish well all I can't 
******** 
Parallax Error - by W. R. Griffin 
 
One misstep and miles apart
Youth's ignorant, abusing heart 
Too soon old, 
And, too late smart 
Passion's pull, body's heat 
Errors rule, mistakes repeat 
Too soon old 
Too soon complete 
Wisdom comes 
Sad remorse 
Too soon old 
And miles off course 
Denial, despair, then depart 
Side by side, now miles apart 
Too late contrite 
And, too late smart 
******** 
Teacher - by W. R. Griffin 
 
Teacher, born when rhyme and reason
Were leaf-worn and leather-bound, 
Sepia-toned and ranked on shelves  
In marbled monuments,and found in  
Principles, principals, pulpits  
And pupils of what ought to be, 
And the limits of the world  
Were the boundaries of imagination, 
Behind young, wide eyes piercing darkness,  
Discerning light,Eager to find something,  
Anything beyond the drudge of daily chore, 
Swarthy family, hot fields, dirt farms or  
Filth factories in far off fiefdoms, 
Teacher, seeker, seer and soother filled with  
Worlds and reams to impart, 
Parceling out bits and pieces of puzzles that fit  
To build new dimensions, 
Answers, lessons, liturgies, literary nutrients  
To grow the green of thought, 
And release from bondage through breaking chains  
Binding untapped minds,Where the ore refined can  
Fill, fuel and fire, illuminate the way  
To real and reason, And make the inner metal  
Into shining steel to withstand the heat and  
Pain of all, To bring a sense of what is right  
And lead upon a path of valued life – Teacher! 
The measure of a life? … The number of littered  
Lives or lifted souls,Who reach the higher high  
Of despairing or empty depths,to the calm  
Of knowledge gained, 
To lift up a child to reach a rose  
In rhyming rhythm or solve a calculated riddled, 
To build an ever growing pyramid of  
Seeking souls that each in turn  
lifts up the other, 
Teacher, who gave what was grown and  
Nourished in her fields, away 
To feed the starved mind and  
Fill the empty spirit, 
Like a crystal spring racing over  
Rocks, shaping, smoothing, 
Growing flowers that bloom and  
Beauty in the world to bloom again, 
And a thousand, thousand petals  
That might have faded fallen, 
Enrich the eyes of others, 
Until the night sky is filled  
With the myriad stars of her crown,  
And respectful heaven bows 
-- A teacher enters here!
-- A teacher enters here!
****************************** 
No Fame, Nor Fool - by W. R. Griffin 
 
I have not been to business height
Nor perused the halls of fame 
I have not run a "Fortune Five" 
No accolades proclaim 
I have not cornered market's stock 
No Swiss accounts my name 
I have no folio to port 
No pedigree to blame 
But I can read the writing there 
Upon life's humble wall 
And will survive, if not thrive 
Any tumult, loss or fall 
I may not make the evening news 
No ticker tape parade 
But I can see as plain can be 
Whenever fools are made 
******* 
Babel’s Epitaph – by W. R. Griffin 
Deep in death, pronounced deceased
Off life-support, the gas decreased 
Talked to death with no one listening 
Freaks and slugs on TVs glistening 
Cell phones stuck to ears and lips 
Triglycerides oozing from butts and hips 
Driving one-handed – blah, blah, yack 
Babel’s towers all talk back 
Nothing owned yet conspicuous 
Consumption’s craze has smothered us. 
************************** 
I am the lamb - by W. R. Griffin 
I yearn, I learn, I must, or bust, constrain
My calling poets boldly, bravely by their name 
Because, I stretch, I reach, I grasp, I crane 
And shyly make mistakes and need to retrain 
So thus from Oliver and Peacock too 
More sternly Roethke says it all anew  
Didactic Fussell tells with heavy hand 
The same as sweeter stars in light command  
When rhyming riddles and confuses much 
All four are best to test your verses - such. 
************************** 
Mystic Bean - by W. R. Griffin 
Mocha Mocha burning bright
Filling my mug in morning light. 
Warm aroma spirits my head 
And makes it easier to leave my bed. 
Slowly slurping mystic muddy foam 
That cranks me up to leave my home. 
From throughout the world 
Comes this mystic bean - 
Thank you Lord for Caffeine! 
************************* 
 
 Cycles - by W. R. Griffin 
The sky turns to a dead-end black
When red dies hard from view, 
To spin its way around and back 
Time’s hands move from old to new. 
This constant arch, these turning wheels 
Churning sounds of gongs and chimes 
Span and toll this grinding march 
As day reels past polar primes.  
The mountains then become the stones 
The buds cling to a ragged bough  
Leaves lightly spin from limbs like bones 
As the past makes room for now. 
The weave of web, the threads interlock 
As the rivers come from dew 
The stitch of past, the fern, the rock 
Soon become the fabric new. 
Dark shades of green turn gold then rust 
The fresh turns to rot and mold 
All rises from our mortal dust— 
This nourishment of old. 
It is this constant tilling blade 
That divides what’s come and gone 
The inexorable move to light from shade 
And again – night bows out to dawn. 
************************* 
Rumors - by W. R. Griffin 
What can you do when people think they know?
The self created door they refuse to open. 
Banging on it to hear what has been said and done. 
The shouts and mumbled moments self fulfilled. 
Their notions of this specter trapped inside, 
From drawn pictures, scrap stories they deride. 
And, painted by people who have heard from people  
Who have heard it! Numb to supplanting truth.  
It doesn’t fit. 
The chain grows from weight on weight. 
Each link to link is made and measured, cold. 
The stories, stories, stories are all old  
And have never stopped. 
If light appears, they squint, 
And all the truths are dropped. 
************************** 
Mortus est – by W. R. Griffin 
Fate is a hand upon the heart.
Hell or heaven are just a swallow’s breath apart. 
How long is infinity that we can measure  
Our great eternal God’s vast whims. 
To live is to die to die is to live -- we learn.  
Children, taught to sing in hollowed hymns. 
Take no note of time’s fitful flight 
A startled dove, perhaps a preying owl 
At night, or a crow perched upon a mantel 
To speak our mortal sins – 
Whether you or I give them flight 
Our breath is caught on heated winds. 
A single road we plod to believe  
In silver chalices as a Roman God commands. 
Yet our dreams turn to shattered palaces, and  
Our arms, legs, hands to shattered beams, all lifeless limbs.  
Cold stones cover all eyes, noses, tongues and ears. 
The dark night comes in and silence screams – No tears. 
************************* 
Black Hole - By W. R. Griffin 
The present is the width of an eyelash,
The blink of a blind eye. 
While the deceitful future appears  
Always before - and the past is voracious - 
A demon eating now like a starving lunatic  
Making room for an avalanche of tomorrows; 
Tomorrows that turn to yesterdays,  
Like mist and fog in the flames of burning suns. 
We see the line from where we stand  
While - like soldiers –the days advance,  
Outflank unrelenting and we are swallowed  
By a black hole, the edge, abyss - event horizon.  
We spill into vortex - time and light collide. 
This all consuming nothing devours itself,  
A universe  gone – and not a single silent scream. 
************************ 
The guitar player - By W. R. Griffin
His head is tilted to the sky,
His eyes a glance of clouds afar, 
He leans and weaves a stunted dance 
Upon a universe and thumbs 
An old guitar; he murmurs, hums.  
His gravel voice grates with starkness  
Stirs the spirits’ song in darkness – 
They hear, they hear and sing along. 
Bright sunlight warms his stolid face, 
In darkness, he finds solace, space 
To intone the spectrum of his life – 
Marked by cold graves, low drums and fife. 
He strums with twisted, weathered limbs – 
Fingers, like old trees bent by stormy whims.  
He incants for those who intoned his life, 
They reach out to assuage his familiar strife,  
Placing pennies on his eyes; they dance, they pace,  
Stroking his old bones, his leathered carapace 
Grateful for bitter-sweet, sardonic, mournful tones. 
One day not far away with all his music done, 
They will dance, sing and bring him slowly 
Into their never-setting, unabating sun; 
Raise him, no longer waiting, up to their eternal place, 
Where all our souls and songs are one. 
************************** 
Bugle Blues - By W. R. Griffin
If you get killed make sure it’s in Afghanistan,
Iraq or on the Rio Grande, then you’ll make 
The news.  You’re screwed if it happens in 
In a “non-hostile place.”  With death in war, 
You’re at least a face on the network news. 
Back home, a photo, a slug line in print, 
A much anticipated funeral, burial, and 
Stars & stripes – ole glory - drapes your coffin, 
And a three or seven or 11 gun salute cracks 
The air!  Maybe a flyover, choppers or a  
Big ass C-130 Hercules, or a flock of Guard jets, 
If your rank is high enough – that’s the real stuff! 
Live coverage by the local TV station, grieving nation, 
With breathless hair-heads talking of death as if 
It just moved in next door. Tight close-ups of 
Your family, tears in white linen, hollowed faces  
- And Taps - echoes from the white granite stones. 
You are in the ground and they are alive but not. 
The funeral recession disperses in the family station  
wagons. The flock of hair-heads moves on to another  
meth bust,  filling station robbery, shooting, a juicy wreck  
with mangled bodies, a child abuse “senseless” death.   
And you? I see you reaching out to her - to them, 
Murmuring - Good night, but lost in your stillness - 
Where we “So do not want to go!”  Bugle blues –  
So yesterday’s news.  
************************** 
Una Persona - by W. R. Griffin  
 
¡Yo no soy un nĆŗmero, un nĆŗmero,
Soy una persona, no un cero,  
Yo soy un humano es quien, 
Una persona, un persona, un humano,  
Yo no soy un mono, no un asno!  
Yo no soy un pollo, no una ardilla! 
¡Soy un humano, un humano, el humano! 
Si Dios me habia hecho para numerar,  
Yo vivirĆa como un nĆŗmero  
Pero Dios me hizo humano.  
Entonces serƩ humano. 
Un humano, no soy un cero –  
No un coche, no una ardilla. 
¡No un cero, no un cero, no un nĆŗmero 
Pero un humano no un numero, 
No una adrilla, ni un escrabajo, no soy perro. 
¡No un cero, no un numero, no una cosa 
Pero humano, un humano, 
No un numero, no una ardilla,  
No soy escarabajo, no un perro! 
************************** 
Feline - by W. R. Griffin
Cats converse across this universe
To spirits blithe and mysterious 
Manifest on faces wise and serious 
Keeping secrets in a mind’s locked purse. 
They hunt unknown with stealth and ease, 
Sing with the zephyr spirits in the breeze. 
Mortals cannot know, unlock the divine 
In the meaning of their yowl or wine. 
Only pharaohs, mystics, druid gods 
Dare intuit a cat’s stares or nods. 
Only those before all time and space 
Can unlock the mysteries in their face. 
Only seers, sages, sultans opine 
How to pierce this veil we call feline. 
****************************
To my daughter wed – by W. R. Griffin
The clouds have cleared and morning sun has shone,
The rains of yesterday have dried though more will come, 
But she has long left the child to find a world her own 
A woman now – flawed frail hands of guiding are now done. 
A beauty with soft blue eyes who smiles her mother’s smiles 
Though clouds can gather in grayed eyes - her father’s storm  
But she is her own and her man does love this winsome form,  
Uniquely she, uniquely he, they’ll face and triumph trials. 
She once flailed her tiny fists at the light of this new world,  
Though now, she knows her path is lit by choice. 
The winding road of life now stretches out unfurled, 
Where any destination, port or place could hear her voice. 
So gather storms, or gather bright blue sky – 
This new couple steps into their world; walks it hand in hand. 
Whether rains or snows in nature’s whim buffets to defy, 
It is their life, and anywhere becomes their perfect land. 
************************* 
The Living Tree – by W. R. Griffin  
The world seems angry at all reasoned thought:
Venting wrath until all willed ideal must bend. 
Forging anger from all - toward our reason’s end. 
I spoke to it not, but with my own wrath I fought. 
It bent me inward in my growing, knowing fears, 
I railed at it, on that cold morning still ringing in my ears; 
I stunned it still with mild beguiling words and smiles, 
Reasoned with it with all my sly appeasing wiles. 
Yet, it grows again too bold both in the day and night, 
Till it bears the rigid resemblance of death - stark white. 
There stands my foe – I beheld again its familiar shine, 
It knew me well and then I  knew that it was mine. 
Once long ago, into my garden all that’s evil stole, 
Blighted my green with evil black as night from pole to pole: 
Then came that morning, and I grew glad, glad to see 
This wretch outstretched in death under the living tree. 
************************** 
Helicopter Crash - by W. R. Griffin 
We went up and we came down
And prayed away our fright. 
And proved two laws which are renowned 
God is great and Newton right. 
To those living who survived that day 
(Aug.7, 1992) and those now deceased
(Aug.7, 1992) and those now deceased
***************************
The Next Generations – by W. R. Griffin 
(Dedicated to our new pioneers)
  
Are we still the pioneers of past -
The grizzled seekers with leathered hands 
Going over the hazed horizon to each last  
Frontier - beyond blue mountain peaks to vast 
Expanses of flat, arid and spiny skull-marked lands? 
Do we still hear the windy mystic murmurs in our dreams 
Whispered voices in distant skies, to find our way,   
By starry night on unmarked trails, up swollen streams?  
Is our flight still as certain as the eagle screams? 
Do we rise, rise with each sun to not rest till close of day? 
Man’s heart once beat to fear, sweat, and strive 
To trudge up every hill, to crest each snowy crag 
To kill and feed on that which teaming, roamed alive – 
To excel with each muddy step, to never fail or lag – 
To best the untamed, uncharted and over death survive.   
We cannot die if we are challenged by life’s toughest test - 
We will forever breathe robust with each extreme we best.
**************************
**************************
A poem is our echo – by W. R. Griffin
A poem is the dream within your secret dream
A poem is much more than it could ever seem  
A poem is that calming calm after every scream  
A poem is the silence felt following darkest storm  
A poem is much more than the sum of words or form  
A poem is that jagged edge out beyond all norm  
A poem is that precious breath after that rainy air  
A poem is your self, your being, your foulest foul or fair  
A poem is your rage, your song – it’s everything you feel  
A poem is your salvation; our desperate need to heal  
A poem is that searing shot, white hot, into our soul  
A poem is that blackest black we feel from pole to pole  
A poem is that brightest light of each day’s rising sun  
A poem is that inner peace we feel when the day is done  
A poem is your bane, your bile; everything and worse  
A poem is both our deepest peace, our violence in verse  
A poem is that abstract you, your essence out of air  
A poem is from all your love or hate, erupting raw and bare  
A poem is that final pleading, halting breath we breathe  
A poem is those buried words that fester, boil and seethe  
A poem is the sum of sums of all our billion parts  
A poem is our first sighs; those final beats of hearts  
A poem speaks in whispers, shouts or sings or cries  
A poem is every thought until everybody dies.  
A poem is the sound of sounds that we have never heard  
A poem is the tunes we feel not knowing word for word.
**************************
Infinite Flick - by W. R. Griffin
  
**************************
Infinite Flick - by W. R. Griffin
Myriads of mists and furnaces,
Spew out fires of creation, 
To spawn a billion stellar blasts,  
Or dense darkness drawing in all light, 
Cosmic crisis in a vacuum, silent,  
Vast and venomous reaching beyond 
Imagination's edge dwarfed by  
dominion without walls,  
To the very beginning, 
God's first twitch,  
And, blackness gave way to form  
this chaos with a reason 
Triple, double sun systems  
whirling gases, flame and dust  
To form a world where light began  
Before the dawn of dinosaur and demon. 
Molten malevolence with ringed ice and rock,  
A thousand winters in one eye 
Bends space and folds upon itself to twist  
time and dimension in a whim 
Wheels in Wheels in Wheels,  
A billion Sagan-esque waltzes spinning 
Vastness beyond all words and reason  
From the pointing of a single finger 
And still this minute man thinks  
he's the center of all creation 
Arrogance that fills the space  
and makes God laugh,  
Like father over child 
Waiting till reason overwhelms  
And in the final glimpse,  
Reality,knowing the end is beginning 
And beginning, is infinity 
***********************
Home - by W. R. Griffin
Hills, gentle and defiled
Rivers, streams crystalline and marred 
Skies bright blue and fouled 
My home and my dearest burden 
People poor yet strong and good 
Faces lined with years and toil 
Coal dust on every breathe they speak 
And gospel truth in all 
Testimony of all hard 
A family in wood, tin shack 
A creek for water and for waste 
Living and dying in same place 
Generations left to work 
While gods in other places watch 
And take away the blood and sweat 
Littered by shelled bodies burnt 
Smokey blue mornings chilled and wet 
Mountains hovering above 
A holler filled with stillness, yet 
I hunger for the sounds of home 
The chatter and twill from distant trees 
Lining gentle slopes and valleys 
Rock hard ground tilled by hand and mule 
And, parted for last sleep 
It’s my blood, my soul 
Images strong and aching 
Behind all that is mine 
My place of solitude and family - My home.
*************************
Refiner's Fire - by W. R. Griffin
Refines our meta-metal 
God's hand and worldly hammers 
Shape and bend 
Flame burns away impurity  
Toward perfection 
To brightest blade that cuts through life  
With ease and grace 
And final testing blows  
Bring sweet submission - sparks aware 
As Celestial Smith holds up to light
 And smiles at His creation. 
************************
************************
 Just a Rose - by W. R. Griffin
A single rose, no more
Speaks the world in simple beauty 
Too many trumpets garishly 
And bespeaks the giddy rash of youth 
Denies the depth 
A whisper says so well 
A single rose, no more 
And a symphony is sounded 
An "ode" is written with a hush 
Eloquence in a stem and bud 
That blossoms, blooms with nurture 
Nature's tribute in rare rich blush 
To love lightly, softly 
Is to love well and long 
A single rose, no more 
Love from the center softest soul 
With leaf on winter's edge 
Love that's lived and knows 
A single rose, no more 
And you shall have it all 
******** 
Kindred Spirit - by W. R. Griffin
I find in you a kindred spirit
Who sees the world full and bright 
With wondrous eyes and hopeful heart 
And restful soul at night. 
*****************************
*****************************
The Rose and Heather - by W. R. Griffin
The rose's beauty fades in winter
And thorny touch can bleed. 
Its petals hide a piercing splinter 
If held too tight in need. 
Heather lasts beneath the snow 
And returns with spring's warm sun. 
Brightly dashes on hillside row 
And o'er the meadows run. 
A rose is deep in passion's call 
Its blush and smell entice. 
But heather's blanket covers all 
When earth is turned to ice. 
******************************
Ode to Fireflies - by W. R. Griffin
******************************
Ode to Fireflies - by W. R. Griffin
To fireflies and summer evenings,
With honeysuckle on the wind. 
Tantalizing, mesmerizing - 
Youth, mind-child, till all summers end. 
God's universe descends and flickers 
Caught in gentle-fisted hand. 
In innocence we can reach, 
And hold to heart, all that's truly grand. 
But to keep is to lose, to lose is to keep 
God's glory's in our loss. 
To live is to die, to die is to live - 
We must follow with our cross.
It left the edges slightly smeared and blue. 
Poem sleuths labored to divine the true 
Meaning, guessing smeared ink or glue. 
These minds more ethereal than mine 
Felt this paltry paper-stain caused such decline 
In my poem's worth, merit, metaphor & meaning, 
Flow, syntax and understanding, leaning 
Toward starting over, bear-bones, Tableau Blanc - 
And, who am I to deny these minds, so not a wonk, 
But just a lover of the pulsed and metered word, 
That resonates over time's walls, spoken - heard. 
Then, if by accident I call to mind one thought,  
I am fulfilled and I have gleaned what ought 
To be or not to be and bring a smile or tear - 
Bolster one's soul in love or routed fear. 
But the workshop sages found it all pedantic 
Ordering complete rewrite, huffed and frantic. 
So, what puffed ego would want to cause such treason! 
Not start again, in rhyme to find poetic reason. 
- As for the deepest meaning of the stain, so azure blue? 
Airline baggage handlers broke open my shampoo!

















































































































































 
DAmn! He beat me to it. -w-
ReplyDeleteQuite moving - congratulations.
ReplyDeleteCraig
wow, so impressive, wonderful, thank you so much for sharing
ReplyDeleteWow, excellent work... Consider adding your blog to The Blog Farm. To add your blog, go to:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.theblogfarm.com/
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