Monday, January 12, 2026

The Dark Curtain of Night

 

This untouched forest is a gift to nearby urban
dwellers though most are oblivious of its
presence on the outskirts of a large metropolitan
city, preserved as a natural setting for wildlife
thanks to its geology, unwelcoming to the
plans of developers where nature has devised
a deep and long, winding ravine where
conifers and deciduous trees grow large and
plentiful and generations of nature lovers
have forged trails through the once-dense
underbrush absent now of grouse and pheasant
still visited by hawks and owls, those avian
hunters whose presence so alarms songbirds.
Deer are now seldom seen as the urban mass
has grown tighter around the nature preserve
but coyotes find there a perfect habitat teeming
with small furred wildlife blithely furnishing
nests with vulnerable offspring. The forest
interior is perpetually dim and fantastical
in winter, snugly comforted with layers of
snow -- and daylight hours short, dusk exerting
its presence in the low hum of murmurs and
sighs, the wind soughing through branches and
boughs, animals and birds settling down
awaiting the dark curtain of nightfall.

 

 

 

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Tell Me This

 


If all the world's a stage, good bard and
we play out our lives in hopes and fears
the drama's on us, whether it be the
sadness imposed when ill fate becomes
us or the joy that ensues when good
fortune beams its best our way. We
aspire and trust, anticipate and forge
a future as best we can never knowing
the outcome as actors on life's stage.
So if life is a theatre of happenstance
in our waking hours what then is
sleep when our subconscious elevates
our minds to another dimension always
familiar, sometimes fraught and very
occasionally brimming with happy
intimates. To sleep, perchance to
dream, and we do, hoping that we may
bypass the demons haunting our psyches
in favour of the gentleness of love and
nostalgia in the understanding that life
is prelude to eternal dreams. Unless
of course dreams are the entry to life?
Tell me do, can we enjoy one lacking
the presence of the mysterious other?

 

 

Saturday, January 10, 2026

The Urban Wilderness

 

 

It was a natural wilderness seldom
penetrated, a large, extended gash in
the earth, a thickly forested landscape
surrounded by farms on land long
settled and arable aside from the
resistant geology of the ravine. Urban
sprawl displaced the farms but nothing
could displace the ravine and the forest
and the water coursing through the ravine
floor. In that forest groundbirds flourished
alongside a panoply of large and small furry
creatures alongside predators both winged
and furred. As houses were built on the
ravine's perimeter migratory corridors
closed and deer became scarce though
more adaptable creatures remained
receptive to an extended food source
cadged from human waste. Residents of
nearby neighbourhoods valued the forest
as a recreational haven where dogs could be
free to spurt into the forest interior and
emerge exercised and happy. Foxes and
raccoons abounded alongside smaller fry
until the abundance of wildlife contracted
when coyotes adopted the habitat treasured
by all. Now, companion dogs' exquisitely
sensitive detection senses are on alert
quietly detecting the presence of alpha
predators bold enough to confront both
dogs and their walkers confident in their
natural rights in this still-wild haven.

 

 

Friday, January 9, 2026

Winter's Frozen Breath

 

















Above, a wide, deep wash of blue.
Not a wisp of cloud to mar this
day's stunning perfection. This
was today's message to us.
Frigid temperatures reign
thanks to the absence of cloud
trapping scant winter heat below.

We are lashed by the icy fingers
of winds in high dudgeon,
knocking the heads of the
forest trees and slicing its fire
across our revealed flesh; eyes
weeping, foreheads frozen.

Dried flower stalks bow in
humble homage to the
insistent, imperious wind.
Gossamer veils of snow
languorously part from
laden spruce boughs.

Oblivious, in their winter
element, the minuscule, dainty
black, grey and white shapes
of chickadees flit from branch
to branch, calling their delight
with their environment.

The creek running through
our Ontario wooded ravine in
this Ottawa Valley is frozen fast,
its glaring surface reflecting
the sun's serendipitous presence
as we lope along snow-padded trails.

We have company this day;
silent, elongated, gracefully
following, then leading us forward.
Our shadows step lively, unaffected
by the chill, the ferocity of wind.
Brought to life by the sun's
life-affirming presence.

 

 

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Eugenics

 Photo

So many times
we passed that place
knowing it was there
not really caring
          then

in young manhood
you draped your bones
on the pristine sheet
of the cagesided bed
and we hovered
in anguished disbelief

saw through a mist
a lifeline pierce
your transparent wrist
           and
the steady drop
transfixed us

this was reality.

Gently the doctor probed
your beloved frame
our foggy memories
for family history
and we waited release
from the dreadful error.

      Now every day
life sustaining injections
balance your present
consolidate your future. Now
every day we note
your altered need
vital dependence.

Daily we tread
a quicksand
in shades of fear and hope
    reading you
like a barometer.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

My Daughter My Stranger


 
There was a time not long ago
    (only a year in fact)
When she hated everyone else's
poison wafting her way. She used
to say cigarettes are dangerous.
Even tried to persuade her friends. 
 
We always had a good understanding
me and my daughter. She has a
     talent for the flute
     and this summer I bought her
a piccolo. Her favourite record
 
was Cimeros's double-flute
     concerto. Her needle-adept fingers
sewed embroideries far finer than
     my young fingers ever did.
This year she's a senior. 
 
She's embroidered a joint
     its smoke spiralling up the
     leg of her faded jeans. Our
house rocks with Alice Cooper's
ghastly lyrics. Every evening now
 
she's out back in the park
     behind our house, here in this
middle-class hamlet. A crowd of
boys and girls. Music blares the
     autumn air. Matches flare the dark
 
to light the weeds. She's high.
     (she gets  high on crowds
          and popularity.)
 'Everyone thinks I'm a stoner'
she tells me laughing. 'It's
my clothes     my fuzzy hair
 
         and the way I  talk.' My
daughter has learned. She knows
how to disarm my wary thoughts. Now
my neighbour with the sniffing nose
     tells her neighbours that my daughter
 
is a bad influence on theirs. I
remember her own daughter. Her way
was tight-lipped with the girl
          and high-voiced.
She always said the reason her girl
 
ran wild was because the girl was
adopted. Never can trust strange genes. 
 
 

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Disarmament


 

Did you know
that the Sea Cucumber
to deflect a pursuer
can regurgitate
its stomach?
 
And did you know that
female monkeys 
to appease belligerent
males turn backside up
in coy invitation?
 
In this way has nature
armed the otherwise
defenceless.
 
Did  you know
the Sea Cucumber
grows a new stomach
and survives. The
monkey raises the
 
fruit of her
propitiatory act.
And did you know
that when you
thunder through the
 
peace of my
existence I offer
myself to
placate the beast.
 
Nature has prepared us
to meet each other.
Did  you know
I am armed with love?