Early April Violet
An ordinary shift in the chilly wind
brings this seed to sprout amid braided debris,
just above the high-water line on a beach,
where the Nissequogue River enters the Sound.
All one can see are five frail petals
on a slender stem, with no visible leaves
to cushion them in such a punishing place,
where the life of a being so small is gauged
in days, and the thin light of early April
is the only tenderness this flower will sense,
exposed on a raft of dead grasses and reeds,
bent by onshore gusts as the new moon ascends,
when a spring tide floats the violet to sea.
This poem originally appeared in the author's poetry collection, Father of Water (2008).
  
  
_________________________________
 Charles Pierre was born in New York City in 1945 and raised in Centerport, New York. He studied at the University of Virginia and worked as a copywriter in Manhattan, where he has lived since 1973. Mr. Pierre is the author of five poetry collections: Green Vistas, Father of Water, Brief Intervals of Harmony, Coastal Moments, and Circle of Time.
Charles Pierre was born in New York City in 1945 and raised in Centerport, New York. He studied at the University of Virginia and worked as a copywriter in Manhattan, where he has lived since 1973. Mr. Pierre is the author of five poetry collections: Green Vistas, Father of Water, Brief Intervals of Harmony, Coastal Moments, and Circle of Time.
No comments:
Post a Comment