Patricia L. H. Black has again given permission to share two of her poems:
FARM POND
A dawn-tinged ruckus rose on the pond
where a dozen migratory geese laid over
for the night. All but one were circling and
circling, calling to a lone waterbound goose
beating the water with one wing, the other
damaged in a night-predator attack. Again
and again, her mate splashed down to her,
then returned to the circling skein. Migration
imperative kept pulling the ring of geese
southward. They cried encouragement till finally
instinct overrode their distress; they lined out,
headed away. Her mate stayed for a few minutes
then, torn, surged after the departing fliers.
I could not tell if his cries said Wait! Wait for me!
I’ll be back! Or Good-bye. I’m sorry! Farewell!
Patricia L. H. Black, 2023
_________________
STOPPING BY WOODS ON A BLOWY EVENING
Whose woods these are I do not care
His house is in the village where
he is inside, toasty warm.
I only wish that I were there.
I wish that Robert would reform,
stop acting so outside the norm
by having these poetic spells.
I wish we both were somewhere warm.
I think I’ll shake my harness bells
so that the brassy sound impels
that dreamer in the driver’s seat
to notice how the cold wind yells.
The woods are dark and I am beat,
the snow is turning into sleet.
I’ve miles to go before I eat;
I’ve miles to go before I eat.
–Patricia L. H. Black 2023
I LOVE both poems, thanks for sharing! The spoof on Robert Frost’s is hilarious 😀
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