Time is what keeps everything from happening at once.
~Ray Cummings
Time is a little wibbly-wobbly today, as I share Art Thursday on Wednesday...
Hope you can look back on 2014 with fondness and forward to 2015 with pleasure. My New Year's resolution is to train our puppy, who has thus far shown little interest in it, so I am looking ahead with eagerness and trepidation.
Closing the Book
John T. McCutcheon
Father Time
photo by Christopher Brown
Pointing
photo by Ron Adams
New Year's Postcard, 1910
Sign Here, Please
German lithograph postcard, 1910
Vintage New Year's Card
photo by Dave
Janus, Waltham Abbey parish church
photo by Steve Day
"The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it's indifference." ~ Elie Wiesel
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Monday, December 22, 2014
Anchor Down
Am I posting more than ever now that I'm "resting" or what? I swear, I'm not posting for the rest of the week, but I had to share this because my Vandy girl is so excited about the Melodores winning the Sing-Off. She knows one of these guys and has sung in a chorus with others:
Sunday, December 21, 2014
Sincerely thankful
A while back, I saw a young man chasing a woman with a object that he was trying to get close enough to hit her with (a stick? a tire iron? I couldn't tell), but she got on the other side of a car and was able to keep out of reach. I called 911 and police officers arrived before he caught her. It was such a relief that she was safe. If I hadn't been able to contact the police, I would have felt obliged to intervene myself, and who knows how that would have gone. I am so thankful for our public servants who are willing to place themselves in dangerous situations every day and I hope we can help them have emotionally-healthy, well-supported departments.
That is all.
An old post: Police Poets
That is all.
An old post: Police Poets
Saturday, December 20, 2014
Rest
Reflections On a Scottish Christmas
by Johnny Cunningham
The dark of winter wraps around us tight.
The lamps are fired, and flickering light
beats time to the fiddle as notes float
softly down, like the years' first snow.
While outside the window
a blast of late December wind
whistles harmony to the drone of the pipes.
We push the old year back against the wall
so we can dance a jig for Christmas
and welcome in the new.
I discovered a peril of herbal medicine recently. My husband was somewhat sick and I kept giving him stuff to make him feel better and then he would go to work. Where he wouldn't get any rest, and we would start again the next day, with him a bit more exhausted. So maybe helping him feel well enough to go was not doing him a favor. Trying to get him to take a day off is somewhere between "tough" and "nearly impossible," but people just need to get their rest, you know?
Speaking of rest, I could use a break (literally and figuratively) myself. Ever since the PTA Reflections arts competition deadline moved from after Christmas to before Christmas, my holidays have been more rushed. I love the Reflections program, but when I turned in this year's entries, I danced a jig in my heart that I am not going to be doing it next year. I've been coordinating the program for eight years and as many as three schools at a time. It's a lot of work at a busy time of year.
So we've had Reflections, illnesses, wisdom tooth surgery, pet minding, present shopping & making going on ... yesterday when I found myself grumbling to the Christmas tree about the fact that it keeps wanting to be watered, I realized that I should cut myself some slack somewhere. I gave myself permission not to post this week. I had to get up a million times while I was writing this (to attend to a cat, a dog, and a sick child) so I figure that was the right choice. Happy holidays, all!
Some old winter and holiday posts.
by Johnny Cunningham
The dark of winter wraps around us tight.
The lamps are fired, and flickering light
beats time to the fiddle as notes float
softly down, like the years' first snow.
While outside the window
a blast of late December wind
whistles harmony to the drone of the pipes.
We push the old year back against the wall
so we can dance a jig for Christmas
and welcome in the new.
I discovered a peril of herbal medicine recently. My husband was somewhat sick and I kept giving him stuff to make him feel better and then he would go to work. Where he wouldn't get any rest, and we would start again the next day, with him a bit more exhausted. So maybe helping him feel well enough to go was not doing him a favor. Trying to get him to take a day off is somewhere between "tough" and "nearly impossible," but people just need to get their rest, you know?
Speaking of rest, I could use a break (literally and figuratively) myself. Ever since the PTA Reflections arts competition deadline moved from after Christmas to before Christmas, my holidays have been more rushed. I love the Reflections program, but when I turned in this year's entries, I danced a jig in my heart that I am not going to be doing it next year. I've been coordinating the program for eight years and as many as three schools at a time. It's a lot of work at a busy time of year.
So we've had Reflections, illnesses, wisdom tooth surgery, pet minding, present shopping & making going on ... yesterday when I found myself grumbling to the Christmas tree about the fact that it keeps wanting to be watered, I realized that I should cut myself some slack somewhere. I gave myself permission not to post this week. I had to get up a million times while I was writing this (to attend to a cat, a dog, and a sick child) so I figure that was the right choice. Happy holidays, all!
Some old winter and holiday posts.
Friday, December 19, 2014
Time to Ponder and Listen
This time of the year is spent in good cheer,
And neighbors together do meet
To sit by the fire, with friendly desire,
Each other in love to greet;
Old grudges forgot are put in the pot,
All sorrows aside they lay;
The old and the young doth carol this song
To drive the cold winter away.
~Traditional
My friend Joyce Ray made my day with the thoughtful parcel she sent for the Winter Poetry Swap. Here's her elegant pantoum:
The Language of Trees
by Joyce Ray
Twigs, sap stilled by cold,
etch brush-stroked Kanji
over gray skies and hold
a promise of spring through winter’s story.
Brush-stroked Kanji etch
tree poems in stick season.
Limbs promise spring and stretch
toward orbs of light to illume and open
the tree poems of stick season
because now is the time to ponder and listen
as light orbs illume and open
Kilmer’s analogy of trees to poems.
Let poets listen. Let poets ponder.
Do trees beckon to hear poems,
stripped of Kilmer’s summer wear,
in winter’s language, plain-spoken?
Perhaps they beckon to hear our prayer
and like twigs, sap stilled by cold,
we’ll pray in the stripped language of winter
against gray skies we must hold.
Joyce also sent chocolates, candles, and a custom ornament
(not pictured because it is already on the tree)
The Poetry Friday round-up is at Buffy's Blog.
And neighbors together do meet
To sit by the fire, with friendly desire,
Each other in love to greet;
Old grudges forgot are put in the pot,
All sorrows aside they lay;
The old and the young doth carol this song
To drive the cold winter away.
~Traditional
My friend Joyce Ray made my day with the thoughtful parcel she sent for the Winter Poetry Swap. Here's her elegant pantoum:
The Language of Trees
by Joyce Ray
Twigs, sap stilled by cold,
etch brush-stroked Kanji
over gray skies and hold
a promise of spring through winter’s story.
Brush-stroked Kanji etch
tree poems in stick season.
Limbs promise spring and stretch
toward orbs of light to illume and open
the tree poems of stick season
because now is the time to ponder and listen
as light orbs illume and open
Kilmer’s analogy of trees to poems.
Let poets listen. Let poets ponder.
Do trees beckon to hear poems,
stripped of Kilmer’s summer wear,
in winter’s language, plain-spoken?
Perhaps they beckon to hear our prayer
and like twigs, sap stilled by cold,
we’ll pray in the stripped language of winter
against gray skies we must hold.
Joyce also sent chocolates, candles, and a custom ornament
(not pictured because it is already on the tree)
The Poetry Friday round-up is at Buffy's Blog.
Thursday, December 18, 2014
It Was Terribly Cold
Have you ever heard Hans Christian Andersen's story of The Little Match Girl? It's a sad tale about a little girl who is sent into the cold to sell matches, but when no one buys any, she winds up using them to warm herself. In their light, she sees happy visions of food, comfort, and her loving grandmother. She freezes during the night and is found in the morning by people who passed her by the night before. It's not a story that I have a sentimental attachment to from my childhood or anything, but last year I shared a bit of David Lang's the little match girl passion. This year I have some art:
Remember the little match girl (Please donate to your local food bank)
photo by Justin Ennis
The little match girl of tucia
photo by 黑本
The Little Match Girl dreaming of Christmas trees (The Hans Christian Andersen museum, Copenhagen)
photo by kurozukin
The fairy tales of Hans Christian Andersen
by Helen Stratton
Little Match Girl
photo by Scott Moore
The Little Match Girl
by Shigeru Hatsuyama
The Little Match Girl loses her shoes, Fairy tales and stories, 1900
illustration by Hans Tegner
The Bloggess is running a "give what you can, take what you need" post that you might want to look at if you are interested in direct ways to help people out. I would scroll down quite a bit to get to messages that have been seen fewer times.
Remember the little match girl (Please donate to your local food bank)
photo by Justin Ennis
The little match girl of tucia
photo by 黑本
The Little Match Girl dreaming of Christmas trees (The Hans Christian Andersen museum, Copenhagen)
photo by kurozukin
The fairy tales of Hans Christian Andersen
by Helen Stratton
Little Match Girl
photo by Scott Moore
The Little Match Girl
by Shigeru Hatsuyama
The Little Match Girl loses her shoes, Fairy tales and stories, 1900
illustration by Hans Tegner
The Bloggess is running a "give what you can, take what you need" post that you might want to look at if you are interested in direct ways to help people out. I would scroll down quite a bit to get to messages that have been seen fewer times.
Monday, December 15, 2014
I'll Paint You A Picture
I am a lighthouse, worn by the weather and the waves.
I keep my lamp lit, to warn the sailors on their way.
This Music Monday, Nickel Creek :-)
I keep my lamp lit, to warn the sailors on their way.
This Music Monday, Nickel Creek :-)
Friday, December 12, 2014
How I Was
A poem today by Ukrainian poet Oksana Lutsyshyna.
The Cat
by Oksana Lutsyshyna
father asked: write a poem about me
how I was young, how I was, period
played the guitar, chased a soccer ball in the field,
bouncing it with my head high into the sky
how I returned home
to our apartment
that smelled of oatmeal and Saturday laundry
with a tapestry hanging on the wall
(on the tapestry
a man and a woman
woven in red
ride a pair of black horses)
no, father, I kept saying, I can’t...
read the rest here.
Poets in Ukraine celebrated like stars
Dave Bakke: Ukrainian war sparks poetry protest
An article about Ukrainian poet Serhiy Zhadan
These Four Corners is the Poetry Friday round-up host.
The Cat
by Oksana Lutsyshyna
father asked: write a poem about me
how I was young, how I was, period
played the guitar, chased a soccer ball in the field,
bouncing it with my head high into the sky
how I returned home
to our apartment
that smelled of oatmeal and Saturday laundry
with a tapestry hanging on the wall
(on the tapestry
a man and a woman
woven in red
ride a pair of black horses)
no, father, I kept saying, I can’t...
read the rest here.
Poets in Ukraine celebrated like stars
Dave Bakke: Ukrainian war sparks poetry protest
An article about Ukrainian poet Serhiy Zhadan
These Four Corners is the Poetry Friday round-up host.
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Visitors
The means by which migratory animals navigate from place to place are as diverse as the journeys themselves. Some species follow an invisible road map created by the earth’s magnetic field, which they perceive through tiny magnets in their bodies. Others rely on landmarks such as mountain ranges and coastlines, the alignment of the stars in the night sky, or olfactory cues to determine where they’re going.
~David S. Wilcove
We live near a pond that is populated by a blue heron, green herons, dozens of Canada geese, mallard ducks, and (at the moment) hooded mergansers. The hooded mergansers are only here for a little while, on their way to warmer climes. I love to hear the hummingbird-esque noise their wings make when they fly. In honor of those beauties, we have a migration theme today.
Gathering Wings
photo by Steve Wall
Morning Migration
photo by Nathan Johansen
Tundra (Whistling) Swans resting after the long migration flight
photo by Dave Rooke
Zebra migration
photo by Francesco Veronesi
Wildebeest migration
photo by Francesco Veronesi
Birds storm!
photo by Riccardo Palazzani
Monarch Migration
photo by Nicole Hanusek
Operation Migration
photo by Virginia Piekarski
~David S. Wilcove
We live near a pond that is populated by a blue heron, green herons, dozens of Canada geese, mallard ducks, and (at the moment) hooded mergansers. The hooded mergansers are only here for a little while, on their way to warmer climes. I love to hear the hummingbird-esque noise their wings make when they fly. In honor of those beauties, we have a migration theme today.
Gathering Wings
photo by Steve Wall
Morning Migration
photo by Nathan Johansen
Tundra (Whistling) Swans resting after the long migration flight
photo by Dave Rooke
Zebra migration
photo by Francesco Veronesi
Wildebeest migration
photo by Francesco Veronesi
Birds storm!
photo by Riccardo Palazzani
Monarch Migration
photo by Nicole Hanusek
Operation Migration
photo by Virginia Piekarski
Friday, December 5, 2014
Soundings
In Soundings, Emily Hancock has created an elegant, lovingly-made work of art. Emily crafted the poems, carved linoleum prints, set the letterpress, and hand-bound the book. Thank you to Emily for allowing me to share these poems and thank you to my daughters for taking these photos!
and from each eave
the steady
heartbeat of ice
|
sundown in pine woods ~
on and on it burns
an ember in a grate
|
when the tide
comes in,
no argument
is strong enough
|
turn to dust
against stone ~
fire's brief flowers
|
You can read more about Soundings at St Brigid Press.
The Poetry Friday round-up is at BookTalking.
Thursday, December 4, 2014
At the Loom
We sleep, but the loom of life never stops, and the pattern which was weaving when the sun went down is weaving when it comes up in the morning.
~Henry Ward Beecher
Spotlighting woven art will have to wait for another day because this time, the focus is weavers:
"Weaving" from Fil and Filippa: Story of Child Life in the Philippines by John Stuart Thomson
illustrated by Maud and Miska Petersham
Stamp of Dahomey, 1961
The "Artisans" series
"Hataori" (Weaving) woodcut print
Shigenobu Yanagawa
The shuttle flies, rushes the machine
John Schiess (1799-1844)
Penelope and the Suitors
by John William Waterhouse
Man Weaving Cane
photo by Anja Disseldorp
Weaver busy making the cloth strips used to manufacture bogolans
Village Songho - Dogon Country - Mali
Rehabilitation of British Soldiers From Normandy
Leading Aircraftman Cheshire, who was admitted with a broken wrist and elbow, weaves a rug at the Robert Jones and Dame Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital
Ministry of Information Photo Division Photographer, Smith Norman
Spider
photo by Toshihiro Gamo
Weaving the Morning by João Cabral de Melo Neto
~Henry Ward Beecher
Spotlighting woven art will have to wait for another day because this time, the focus is weavers:
"Weaving" from Fil and Filippa: Story of Child Life in the Philippines by John Stuart Thomson
illustrated by Maud and Miska Petersham
Stamp of Dahomey, 1961
The "Artisans" series
"Hataori" (Weaving) woodcut print
Shigenobu Yanagawa
The shuttle flies, rushes the machine
John Schiess (1799-1844)
Penelope and the Suitors
by John William Waterhouse
Man Weaving Cane
photo by Anja Disseldorp
Weaver busy making the cloth strips used to manufacture bogolans
Village Songho - Dogon Country - Mali
Rehabilitation of British Soldiers From Normandy
Leading Aircraftman Cheshire, who was admitted with a broken wrist and elbow, weaves a rug at the Robert Jones and Dame Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital
Ministry of Information Photo Division Photographer, Smith Norman
Spider
photo by Toshihiro Gamo
Weaving the Morning by João Cabral de Melo Neto
Friday, November 28, 2014
Upons
If I had my life to live over again, I would have made a rule to read some poetry and listen to some music at least once every week.
~Charles Darwin
Upon Being Asked What I Believe In
by Christine Rhein
after Dean Young
I say, for starters, the word in,
the way it dumps quicksand before
love and trouble, or after belief
and jump right! I say the days I'm sunk
in up to my waist, improvising
with ingredients at hand. I say the sizzle
of bacon, onions, the wooden spoon
meandering through thick lentil soup
with basil. I say all the herbs in my garden,
pushing roots into earth. I say the Zen
of weeding, aches that follow. And how,
in Japan, they seat a guest facing away
from the most beautiful part of the room,
remember the person later as what's missing
from the art.
Read the rest here
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What to Say Upon Being Asked to Be Friends
By Julian Talamantez Brolaski
Why speak of hate, when I do bleed for love?
Not hate, my love, but Love doth bite my tongue
Till I taste stuff that makes my rhyming rough
So flatter I my fever for the one
For whom I inly mourn, though seem to shun.
A rose is arrows is eros, so what
If I confuse the shade that I’ve become
With winedark substance in a lover’s cup?
Read the rest here
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Poetry Friday round-up is at Carol's Corner.
~Charles Darwin
Upon Being Asked What I Believe In
by Christine Rhein
after Dean Young
I say, for starters, the word in,
the way it dumps quicksand before
love and trouble, or after belief
and jump right! I say the days I'm sunk
in up to my waist, improvising
with ingredients at hand. I say the sizzle
of bacon, onions, the wooden spoon
meandering through thick lentil soup
with basil. I say all the herbs in my garden,
pushing roots into earth. I say the Zen
of weeding, aches that follow. And how,
in Japan, they seat a guest facing away
from the most beautiful part of the room,
remember the person later as what's missing
from the art.
Read the rest here
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What to Say Upon Being Asked to Be Friends
By Julian Talamantez Brolaski
Why speak of hate, when I do bleed for love?
Not hate, my love, but Love doth bite my tongue
Till I taste stuff that makes my rhyming rough
So flatter I my fever for the one
For whom I inly mourn, though seem to shun.
A rose is arrows is eros, so what
If I confuse the shade that I’ve become
With winedark substance in a lover’s cup?
Read the rest here
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Poetry Friday round-up is at Carol's Corner.
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Unreal
Thanksgiving is the holiday that encompasses all others. All of them, from Martin Luther King Day to Arbor Day to Christmas to Valentine's Day, are in one way or another about being thankful.
~Jonathan Safran Foer
No reason for sharing abstract art today, except that I am not usually thankful enough for it.
Lichen Art
by Jeremy Atkinson
Abstract Pop-Up Toaster
by Wayne Wilkinson
Ink in Water
by Leonardo Aguiar
Fellow Traveller
by Mr. Art
Splattered Rock
by Jean Delage
Lessons from an Alchemist
by Humberto Antonio Muñiz
Written Words
by Angel A. Alfonso Castillo
~Jonathan Safran Foer
No reason for sharing abstract art today, except that I am not usually thankful enough for it.
Lichen Art
by Jeremy Atkinson
Abstract Pop-Up Toaster
by Wayne Wilkinson
Ink in Water
by Leonardo Aguiar
Fellow Traveller
by Mr. Art
Splattered Rock
by Jean Delage
Lessons from an Alchemist
by Humberto Antonio Muñiz
Written Words
by Angel A. Alfonso Castillo
Monday, November 24, 2014
Here's To You, My Little Loves
For people like us
In places like this
We need all the hope
That we can get
~The Call, I Still Believe
The Call -- still a rousing way to start a morning!
LET THE DAY BEGIN
Here's to the babies in a brand new world
Here's to the beauty of the stars
Here's to the travellers on the open road
Here's to the dreamers in the bars
Here's to the teachers in the crowded rooms
Here's to the workers in the fields
Here's to the preachers of the sacred words
Here's to the drivers at the wheel
Here's to you my little loves
With blessings from above
Now let the day begin
Here's to you my little loves
With blessings from above
Now let the day begin, let the day begin
Here's to the winners of the human race
Here's to the losers in the game
Here's to the soldiers of the bitter war
Here's to the wall that bears their name
Chorus
Here's to the doctors and their healing work
Here's to the loved ones in their care
Here's to the strangers on the street tonight
Here's to the lonely everywhere
Here's to the wisdom from the mouths of babes
Here's to the lions in the cage
Here's to the struggles of the silent poor
Here's to the closing of the age
Here's to you my little loves
With blessings from above
Now let the day begin
In places like this
We need all the hope
That we can get
~The Call, I Still Believe
The Call -- still a rousing way to start a morning!
LET THE DAY BEGIN
Here's to the babies in a brand new world
Here's to the beauty of the stars
Here's to the travellers on the open road
Here's to the dreamers in the bars
Here's to the teachers in the crowded rooms
Here's to the workers in the fields
Here's to the preachers of the sacred words
Here's to the drivers at the wheel
Here's to you my little loves
With blessings from above
Now let the day begin
Here's to you my little loves
With blessings from above
Now let the day begin, let the day begin
Here's to the winners of the human race
Here's to the losers in the game
Here's to the soldiers of the bitter war
Here's to the wall that bears their name
Chorus
Here's to the doctors and their healing work
Here's to the loved ones in their care
Here's to the strangers on the street tonight
Here's to the lonely everywhere
Here's to the wisdom from the mouths of babes
Here's to the lions in the cage
Here's to the struggles of the silent poor
Here's to the closing of the age
Here's to you my little loves
With blessings from above
Now let the day begin
Friday, November 21, 2014
A Thousand Elements Conspiring
Sharing poems from The Last Girl by Rose Solari today.
Tree House of the Dream Child
by Rose Solari
It has been here forever. Who
built it, nobody knows. Time itself
might have pressed these boards
into rows, hammered home
the nails. Nobody plays here.
Neighborhood boys once hung
their pennants from its windows,
while girls slipped hand over hand
up the rope ladder. How high
the grass grows — no one lives
around here anymore. Come
with me as I walk the perimeter
of this field, and don’t be afraid.
Though the earth is wild, nothing
can hurt us here. And if we’re lucky,
if the light is good and a thousand
other elements conspire, we might see,
moving inside the one high room
of the tree house, the dream child. Hear
the floorboards singing her step, see
her old, new face. Safe in those walls,
plying her solitary art, she is a word
for keeping and losing, a talisman
against this sky, which is red-black,
now, and terrible, and our own.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Last Girl
by Rose Solari
In the summer dusk, we came out like fireflies,
the neighborhood children, swarming the best
backyards. At the Sedlacks’, a long grassy span
for football. At the O’Briens’, a forest of shrubs
for hide and seek. It felt like freedom, like a taste
of being adult, running those blocks in the almost
dark, at home in the space between homes.
All last spring, the next door neighbor’s yard
was loud with backhoes and workers, building
a basketball court for the youngest. Her mother says
she wants to go pro. At maybe thirteen, she has
long straight hair and serious legs, almost never
smiles. She’s out there every day, and always alone.
And I think, what if children running the streets
are like frogs or salmon? What if their disappearance
means we’ve wrecked the world past repair? What if
she — I don’t know her name — becomes the last girl
left on earth who will play outside? At night, I hear
the shake and swing of the metal basket chains.
Two points, then three. Two points, then three.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Printed with permission from Alan Squire Publishing. Copyright © 2014 Rose Solari. Available for purchase at bookstores and e-tailers everywhere.
The Poetry Friday round-up is at Tapestry of Words.
Tree House of the Dream Child
by Rose Solari
It has been here forever. Who
built it, nobody knows. Time itself
might have pressed these boards
into rows, hammered home
the nails. Nobody plays here.
Neighborhood boys once hung
their pennants from its windows,
while girls slipped hand over hand
up the rope ladder. How high
the grass grows — no one lives
around here anymore. Come
with me as I walk the perimeter
of this field, and don’t be afraid.
Though the earth is wild, nothing
can hurt us here. And if we’re lucky,
if the light is good and a thousand
other elements conspire, we might see,
moving inside the one high room
of the tree house, the dream child. Hear
the floorboards singing her step, see
her old, new face. Safe in those walls,
plying her solitary art, she is a word
for keeping and losing, a talisman
against this sky, which is red-black,
now, and terrible, and our own.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Last Girl
by Rose Solari
In the summer dusk, we came out like fireflies,
the neighborhood children, swarming the best
backyards. At the Sedlacks’, a long grassy span
for football. At the O’Briens’, a forest of shrubs
for hide and seek. It felt like freedom, like a taste
of being adult, running those blocks in the almost
dark, at home in the space between homes.
All last spring, the next door neighbor’s yard
was loud with backhoes and workers, building
a basketball court for the youngest. Her mother says
she wants to go pro. At maybe thirteen, she has
long straight hair and serious legs, almost never
smiles. She’s out there every day, and always alone.
And I think, what if children running the streets
are like frogs or salmon? What if their disappearance
means we’ve wrecked the world past repair? What if
she — I don’t know her name — becomes the last girl
left on earth who will play outside? At night, I hear
the shake and swing of the metal basket chains.
Two points, then three. Two points, then three.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Printed with permission from Alan Squire Publishing. Copyright © 2014 Rose Solari. Available for purchase at bookstores and e-tailers everywhere.
The Poetry Friday round-up is at Tapestry of Words.