In your footprints I step
Wondering
If the ground felt the same
When first you stepped there
In your footprints I step
Wondering
If the ground felt the same
When first you stepped there
I hear the distant sounds of bright
Machines of earthly hand
At all hours of the quiet night
My focus sounds demand
I wish for chirping crickets then
Instead of crashing things
For music made by careless men
Pales next to that of strings
There is a comfort
In storms
A sudden solace
An unexpected peace
In the wrath of the heavens
Coming down upon a world
Oft undeserving of itself
Let me wander, wondering
What wondrous songs the world might sing
If sand lines that mean not a thing
Were left to fray like hempen string
In the quiet evening
As the wind drops
And the birds hide
And the little sounds of night
Whisper softly
I lay my head upon your lap
And listen to your breath
Your heartbeat
And it is a song finer
Than any of the world
There was a time I rode upon
A wind both fierce and strong
That carried me hither and yon
And forced a journey long
At first I asked for quiet, then
I asked to turn around
But winds do not listen to men
And ‘long Fate’s road they bound
So to horizons far I flew
E’er wondering where I’d wend
Unknowing what I’d travel through
Ere we reached journey’s end
At last when wind began to die
I looked around to see
That rivers, plains, and mountains high
That theretofore were spinning by
Without a hint to how or why
Had gone and transformed me
Stretching shadows
Along the quivering grasses
Where the birds seek the clippings
And the wildflowers poke through
There is a hidden oasis
Within an unassuming speck
Of the wide world
Saturday poem, special edition: It’s on Sunday instead!
More than the countless stars
More than the boundless sea
More than the tallest mountains
Is how much I love thee
I hurry to the cliff’s edge
Then wonder
What comes next
I walk along a narrow road
‘Twixt equal gardens green
Each holding fruits that once I sowed
When my path was more clean
And there ahead the road does end
And somehow I must choose
In which garden I’ll so long wend
And which garden I’ll lose