
House of Dreams
3 & 4
3
The light fails
fast, I hold up
shorn stumps
of flowers
for the night
wind to heal.
The pale magnolia
bleeds into summer:
white petals
melting on the lawn
like snow.
Sparrow sings
an afterlife
built of spring
branches.
4
Pressed between
the pages of my dream:
a lingering scent –
the death of last
year’s delphiniums –
the tall tree
toppled in the yard –
a crab apple flower-
a shard of grass
as brittle
as a bitter tongue
at winter’s
beginning.
Comment:
“La poesía se explica. Si no, es inexplicable.” Pedro Salinas. Poetry explains itself. If it doesn’t, it’s inexplicable.
This is particularly true when metaphor rules and feelings and meaning are contained in words. In addition, the musicality of words can never be ignored. The rhythm they bear within them speaks for itself.
Show don’t tell – easy advice, but what exactly does it mean? So many people say so many different things. A cliché is always the simplest form of criticism.
“I don’t understand your poem,” Moo tells me.
“Neither do I,” I reply, “and I wrote it.”

“I don’t understand your painting,” I tell Moo.
“Neither do I,” Moo replies. “And I painted it.”
Words of wisdom.
Breathe deep.
Look and listen.
Don’t think.
Feel.
Hear the smell of color.
Touch the emanating light.
Taste the dry leaves crackling.
See the words shaping,
carving themselves
deep into your dream.