See all photos here: “https://www.amazon.com/photos/share/YD8D6jFiWTJysnj7VIqT8bgf39VYwd36hZWdPyUFi84”
Original Poetry – T.S. Deary
-
Poetry Album #3 – A Sense of Summer
I can see the summer coming.
It is on the winds that blow and the rains they bring.
I can see it in the way the dog smells the wind and how she slows her pace, getting hotter quicker than usual.
The flowers begin to wilt in the noon time but quickly revive at dusk to their full brilliance.
I can smell the summer coming.
It is there in the piles of cut grass that get dry and brown as the day moves on.
It is in the rising smoke of the barbecue that settles over the backyard and then rises up and away with the evening wind.
And in the chlorine of the pool water that drips off her sun kissed skin as she waits to come back into the house.
I can taste summer coming in the ripened melon cut at the table and then devoured after dinner and again in the homemade lemonade she squeezed into the tall glass, poured over ice and then stirred with a metal spoon.
And in the strawberries, soft and sweet, added to breakfast.
I can hear the summer coming.
Sometimes the sound comes in the loud bursts over the yards of the neighborhood as lawns are cut and shaped.
The sound is there in the splashing and yelling of children as they sit in shallow pools on the front lawn – a taste of what is to come.
I can hear it in the voices of students who speak with excitement as they mark off days on calendars – going backwards to zero.
Then come the sounds of motor cycles and top down cars going down the road towards later and later sunsets.
I can touch summer coming towards me in ever more obvious ways.
It is in the sweat that falls off of my forehead as I walk the st in the late afternoon and in the new flowers that grow out in front of the house along with the wash leaves of the magnolia.
I feel it when I touch the warm skin of my daughter’s forehead and shoulders and in the smooth sun block I spread on her freckled nose.
Grey sky, blue sky.
Dry grass, wet grass.
Clouds a mile high.
Sunshine like polished brass.
Painted butterfly.
Mother cat and kittens holding playful class.
Summer winds,
Breezy nights,
High noon sun,
Shadetree picnic,
Sunburned face,
Tanned brown skin,
All senses alive,
Full of breath and growing.
2. After the Rain
After the rain in front of the house the dirt road runs like a river and creates small ponds at the edges of the grass.
Thenrest runs down the street and gets splashed to the sides by the cars beginning their day leaving tire tracks behind as if they are souveniers.
(A semi- permanent salute to progress against nature.)
Until the sun returns and the wet road becomes dry stains and the tracks slowly disappear and the road turns to dust getting spread around when the wind blows…..
Until the sky grows dark,
and the clouds break open, spilling water,
and that river flows again!
3. A Brand New Day
She walked to school on the sidewalk under over hanging limbs that dropped water on her upturned face as she moved along.
Smiling face,
A state of grace,
A Brand new day,
Storm memories along the way.
In that smile there was relief and joy over the passing of violent storms – scary noise and illuminated nighttime skies.
Keeping company with the cat under the bed.
Watching the light show through the blinds as it plays out on the far wall.
Scared, wide eyes.
Thunder stilting cries.
Feline freind, fear to transcend.
This is a new day and now there is nothing to be afraid of – the cat was lying in the morning sun under the window, occasionally clicking his tail and then making it into the shape of a question mark.
When walks to school and looking up smiles as the drops from the trees hit her gently on her face.
4. A Swallowed Evening
The clouds built in from the West that day.
I was expecting them from the East.
The wind handled the trees like a celestial beast.
Sky turning black from a cloudy grey.
Then came the lightning flashes! Loud and long, turning the darkness into bright day,
like some cosmic, atmospheric, dramatic play,
a building crescendo of intensifying power and electronic sharpness.
The rain poured down in steady waves,
creating running rivers down the dirt road.
The cats ran across the lawn, looking for some sheltering cave.
They scattered as if responding to some ancient feline code.
The storm grows, atmospheric music as if making notes across a stave.
The storm’s fury spent, and moving on as if the once quiet evening had been swallowed.u
5. Fireworks
1. We walked to the end of Albedo Road as soon as it got dark, looking West and waiting for the sky to be illuminated,
listening for the coming symphony,
punctuated by bursts of sonic notes.
School was far away, on no one’s mind.
We were making independence memories.
2. I drove the kids to Valentine Park well before dark.
They played and ran around, climbing on rocks and jumping, asking, “when will the sun set?”
In their questions there were echoes,
from the past, from those nights at the end of Alvero Road and the beginning of new independence memories.
6. Cats and DogsIt rained everybday,
the entire month of May.
Pouring rain, all day, ending in the evening,
then starting again in the morning.
The two cats could not have cared less,
as they lay on the window sill and flicked their tails back and forth, silent expression, like pieces in a game of chess.
Sometimes they chased the drops as they rolled down the window.
Drops that fell from high to low.
The dog is quite troubled by all the rain,
sitting by the door, whimpering and pacing back and forth as if she is in pain.
When night comes she takes restless naps,
lying on the couch but looking out the window when an occasional car comes down the street carefully navigating all those muddy, pot hole traps.
The cats, completely comfortable, spent the night in their usual spots, curled up and snoozing away,
at daybreak the stretch and yawn, the smaller of the two is ready to play.
To them the dog is a curious and obsessed creature,
she no longer even notices the cats since the door that never opens is her constant fixated feature.
When may ended, June arrived all bright and sunny, the dog was delighted and anxious as the sun came through the window on top of the door.
The cats were pleased as they also found the sun coming through the low window in the bedroom and they fell asleep right there on the floor.
-
A Sense of Summer – Inspiration!
I once heard a writer quote a poet saying: “My favorite drink is February.” Neil Peart used those words to describe his love of being in the mountains of Quebec during his favorite time of year. I love the reference! It implies something that is taken in completely, it is nourishing and comforting and something that gives pleasure and relief. I remember growing up in New England and being able to feel autumn coming. The season was so strong that it could be felt, taken in, drank with all senses, sight, smell, taste and touch. It was my “favorite drink.” Now living in Florida I have discovered the powerful arrival of summer. One has to live here for a while to see that there are in fact seasons here. They are much more subtle but they exist. Here, the most powerful and noticeable arrival is summer. This is what “A Sense of Summer”. It is about being able to experience the arrival of a season, to drink it in, to sense it with all the senses!
T.S. Deary
6/19/2018
-
Poetry Album #2 – Blue Springs
1. A Natural Hammock
The site of an everlasting treasure, ecological.
Sustained by rain from the sky and the rays of the sun, appealing to the psychological.
Various trees descending along the Springs in a beautiful natural arrangement of leaves and branches.
Walking through on a beautiful spring day, the wind and the trees engaging in cosmically arranged dances.
A mixture of tropical and hardwood trees on a hilly barrier to the water of the Spring.
In the canopy birds rest and wait until the wind is right and they once again take wing.
Thick set trees form a natural camoflouge good enough to hide a panther.
Waiting and watching unknown, untouchable, with eyes of amber.
A timid white tail deer walks carefully on the hill above the Spring.
She has hidden her fawn, carefully in the brush and trees, she listens intently as the many birds sing.
Picture perfect setting, ecological. Picture perfect mindset the effect is psychological.
Spending the day there I imagine spreading a hammock between the trees to sway in the breeze and smell the scents of the forest, not to disturb but to reflect and meditate on the music of the branches played by the wind.
Composing lyrics and creating the rhythm on the palm of relaxing hands and then letting the sound fade as my hammock sways in time.
The sun comes down in beams through the leafy canopy just enough to be comfortable and all around the sounds continue and become one with my relaxing breath until the sun sets.
2. The Thursby House
The house at Blue Spring Landing,
Built in 1872 atop a Native American midden,
Now stands in the shadow of an old oak that keeps it partially hidden.
Once the home of Luis Thursby,
Nearby a steamboat landing, once surrounded by an orange grove.
A stopping point for steam boats shipping goods to the north,
The grand house was heated by the fire of a wood burning stove.
The timber of its frame, constructed in 1872, were cut from three kinds of pine shipped south from Savanah.
A third story added some thirty years later, now these boards are a distinctive form of Americana.
Three white rocking chairs on the front porch.
Moving slightly from a gentle March breeze.
Maybe the once proud owners of that house are there in spirit and sitting on that porch for an afternoon of relaxation, looking over orange groves or waiting for a boat to arrive.
Only now they share their once thriving grove with visitors from all over and they stand and look through windows engaging in a voyeuristic curiosity as the boards creak underneath their feet.
3. Three Rocking Chairs
On the porch of the Thursby House there are three rocking chairs.
Visitors sit and pass the time on lazy afternoons after stepping up the short set of stairs.
These modern visitors are inclined to browse and take photos of the surrounding place.
Maybe in the windows they can see their own reflected face.
Or maybe sitting and rocking slowly on the old porch and once relaxed they begin to contemple.
Trying to connect last and present in an effort to communicate.
Connect with some long ago scene, from an era long gone, but on some similiar, windy afternoon.
Perhaps the builder of this house sat and thought about fleeting life and freinds gone to fast?
Now we think of taking photographs, a kind of permanent autograph.
A way to pass a windy afternoon, covered porch, cooling sun kissed skin.
Or a place to wait out a rainstorm that suddenly appears on the horizon?
The welcoming chairs,
that away in the gentle breeze or that comfort in the violence of the storm.
Rocking in time to the swaying wind and the voices that carry from then to now.
4. Blue Spring Landing
I have never been there at sunrise but I have seen the landing at sunset.
They sun’s colors out over the calm water, dark, deep full of its own secrets and ways.
This is a place to come to when the days become to much, when the mind needs to forget, or to remember the persistent passage of time and all the changes brought on by progress.
Like when steamboats once docked here and sent passengers and cargo to the dock, some for business and others just for pleasure.
Maybe from some northerrn, frozen place landing here to watch the sunset over the same water my eyes were once so fixed upon.
A tourist from another era,
exploring this then untouched place, observing the graceful egret or a bird of prey taking off from a free by the river.
If such scenes could be set side by side and examined I imagine there would be much to be considered alike.
Me the northern transplant seeking to unwind at the number nd of a long day and some other visitor from a northern port stepping off the boat and feeling ready to unwind watching a sunset portrait presented generations apart.
We are one in this instant separated only by time.
The landing remains constant.
5. The Great Freeze
Thursby planted the land around Blue Springs with large orange groves.
Ben using the river he went crates full North in droves.
The location was a perfect blend of sun warmth and soil.
The oranges grew on magnificent trees and he waited till harvest came, the time of his greatest toil.
His groves produced one million boxes of fruit in a good seson.
When the freeze came it struck down all, no rhyme, no reaeon.
There were two periods of freeze that year.
They first in 1894 the second in 1895.
They first did not kill many mature trees and th warm month that followed set up retro th and a time to thrive.
In the second wave of ice and freeze February brought an icy wind and freezing temperatures that destroyed those once thriving trees.
Trees and futures split in half.
Madness descended from this sky and took away the groves.
Near my house the train tracks run across the wooded edge of the Western Highlands.I never see them but I here them rumbling along the tracks.
Whistles blowing and breaking the silence of the night; the positive silence of Blue Springs and scaring the deer that stopped to drink or the bear roaming the night.
I wonder if the old windows on Thursby’s house rattle and shake as the enormous line of cars roll by?
It most certainly disturbed my peace for a moment but the tranquility of this Springs has been changed forever.
Probably like that night more than a century ago when all of Thursby’s trees were frozen to the core, broken in half by the weight of ice and frozen fruit.
That wind that brought the cold soon disappeared but his fortunes changed completely.
Now the boats at landing will not pick up oranges to bring them north but they bring tourists south, they come for the c!imate, not the fruit.
Today the boats carrying tourists are replaced by trains.
The Great Freeze changed everything then and now.
Some change is natural, some the result of progress, some are inexplicable – supernatural leaving us breathless!
The world turns on its axis, dependable and comstant, until the norm becomes upset and change is coded upon us – when we are pushed to new wisdom by the awful grace of God.
-
Poetry Album #1- Greetings from a Barren Place
1. I don’t live here anymore
I never remembered these roads being so crowded and busy,
or dark as they were when I returned from a long absence and those curves and narrow turns made me dizzy.
I spent a restless night in the downstairs room by the stove, a brace against the cold wind outside.
My thoughts were thick and convoluted, unable to sleep,
the night was restless, my thoughts came and went and reminded me that I had no where to hide.
In my dreams, in and out of sleep,
came the hurtful reminder of why I left and more.
No doubt my roots here run deep,
but it is true – I don’t live here amymore.
Woke in the morning to a cold Northwest wind blowing.
I decided to walk the neighborhood streets to remember and to try to believe be again,
all around the atmosphere seemed to have stopped growing.
I made my way home listening for all those echoes,
spoken words from yesterday, possibly still heard or maybe faded and gone forever.
Mostly what I found where ancient, shrouded, dead empty, shadows.
I don’t live here anymore.
Yesterday is now the stuff of lore.
I don’t live here anymore.
Yesterday is suspended like an unwatched movie in a now closed store.
I don’t live here anymore.
Feeling low and disconnected, I separate as with the heart of a traitor.
The morning came and the day went by as if it was a short chapter in a long book.
When night returned the book was closed and put back on a shelf.
Looking in the small mirror of the small bathroom as I shaved I told my weary self….. “I don’t live here anymore.”
2. Outside looking in
I wish I could elevate, levitate myself to the height of the big window and look in on them whenever I felt the wish to do so.
Then I could see and sketch a personal portrait of him and her and all that passes between them.
On evenings in one of the furnished rooms, in the recliner by the China hutch or by the sofa under the eastern window there they sit and between them passes a lifetime of memory but interrupted by silence as if portions of the tape had somehow been erased.
Maybe downstairs by the big French doors where the brown chair sits back against the glass, bathed in the soft orange light of the fire and the full blue glare of the television.
He does not like to be interrupted but she asks if he is ok? (Sometimes provoking anger or a quick rebuke.)
Outside the night goes on and I, just a stranger walking by, observe and wonder.
They talk about who will get what chairs and furniture, who will take the pictures off the walls and what will become of the house?
All the while in the darker corners of the house are the lingering secrets that he has balled up and thrown away over the years that wait to be opened up and unraveled.
She keeps her secrets close to her chest as if they were pressed clothes to be out on hangers to be hung in the closet in one of the spare rooms but they are only to be worn by ohters at a much later time.
The night continues until the sun shines into the eastern side of the house bringing light to a new day and then throwing off the chains of delusion and then grows tired having to face another day without knowing what will come later on.
She tries to walk on egg shells to avoid his anger and I notice how she wears the expression of a lonely person.
I remain silent as my voice would not be heard anyway, I remain outside looking in, unable to intervene in the constant verbal chess he plays against the slow fade to black…..
He is restless and unable to remain still and he blames everyone but himself and his need for control, the clock ticks on the wall, the windows catch the fading sun in the hall, on the hour, the sound of chimes, reminding and marking the passage of time.
In his room he pulls the shade to block my view and then sits and stares at walls of blue.
My mind is tired, heavy and worn, those curtains are pulled down and drawn, there is nothing left to see…..
3. The Black Chair
At my father’s house there is a black chair in an upstairs room, a reclining chair of handsome black leather with brass nails holding the upostelry in place.
From the chair he tells stories that he now struggles to remember (names, places, details)
It is the centerpiece of the room and catches all eyes that enter especially when he sits and reads his paper, it would be a fitting memorial to sculpt him sitting in that chair but he would have to be placed in a younger, better time before his mind started to go.
Back when his wit and wisdom were sharp as a razor and he could hold his audience in the palm of his hand, instead of the cane he now carries to lean on and to carry his shifted weight up and down the stairs.
Since he is so restless and is up and down so many times a day and he always makes his way back to that black chair.
His throne, spirit having flown, mind becoming barren all the while pretending he has the qualities of a claren.
His throne in black, under the weight of his time becoming ready to crack.
Someday that black chair will be empty.
Gracing some other room in another house the black chair of the once great cognoscente.4. Old Man
You and I are one and the same.
Everything of me is of you.
Similar beyond mere name.
Old man, everything I know and practice is from the book you wrote.
All the negative and all the positive wired into me beyond simple DNA.
I wear your words like a heavy, old, winter coat.
I see and interpret your actions and now I stand by as we split into factions.
I have watched as you bully.
Never understanding your motivation fully.
I have watched as you lash out at my mild angelic mother and then belittle myself and my brothers.
Old man you have reaped and you have sown and I have watched and grown.
Old man the sun is setting, the end is coming I am betting.
I can’t say that my gaze is never done in admiration, it is now and again.
But I can say that around the corners of my mouth and in my eyes there is resentment.
Greetings from a barren place, where nothing ever grows, and as the night builds in the old man sits staring into space.
5. Mother
My mother is the kindest woman I have ever known, angelic nature, God given, gentle spirit.
She has endured it all, even kindness and mercy unshown.
My mother sits lonely in her house.
Her children have moved away, encouraged to by their father, sometimes returning.
Homestead company except that of her deteriorating spouse.
She is smart and lonely, graceful and elegant.
She takes his moods and his bullying rants, rageful face betraying her nature by interacting roughly, he is arrogant.
The last is gone away from here and he knows best or so he says, father knows best, mother should defer, so she does and still she stays.
One hundred days have gone.
One hundred more to come.
One more day to many.
One more is not enough.
Mother!
You have not gone unnoticed.
Mother!
You have not lost your lustre.
Figure enshrined in grave, living under strife wearing a laurel of elegance…
Figure of patience.
6. I know better
Why do you question me so boldly?
I am coherent and stable, nothing about me is feeble.
Then you sit and ask me why I stare at you so coldly?
Why did you leave me in an unfamiliar place?
It was unnecessary to the extreme and besides I already told you, I know better!
So please take a long, deep look at the determination on my face!
I know better than all of you and I have no need for your constant streams of advice.
I know what is true, I know better than all of you.
There is no need for a dictor, my knowledge will suffice!
I don’t recall any of the things you allude to.
I don’t recall any of the things you say that I have count to.
I don’t require any evaluation.
I will use manipulation!
I remember perfectly well everything that you can’t see.
My younger brother has come back to see me so I need to get ready for the visit.
When he comes as will visit, he and me.
I can find my way around this house, I choose to wander and he unsteady, I know better, can I have the keys to the car?
I want to go and buy you a new blouse!
See how he wanders and stares?
He wanders around, speaking out loud and thinks no one can hear him.
He has lost his way and still he says he knows better.
All of this is his business and he can’t imagine why anyone cares!
Pictures become turned around backwards in a broken frame.
Posted and hanging on the edge of your soul, cracked glass front.
Everything always the same.
7. Greetings from a Barren Place
How do I know?
I got left behind.
I have already day looked and he is gone.
There is nothing left to show!
He sent his greetings from some barren place.
He asked me to look but I did not dare.
Being here was hard enough with all those feelings competing!
Greetings from a barren place, there is nothing left of him, not a trace.
Greetings from a barren place, such a blank stare on his face.
No longer a boy, I catch my face in reflection .
No need to speak there is no one to listen.
It remains, a shiny, sinister toy.
Now the angle of light has shifted and the days are coming to an end, he stares and wonders who is looking back? The past and it’s hold on him has lifted.
The mirror does not lie!
Captured images of yesterday, up and down the stairs mirror at the top, the pictures perfect spy.
T.S. Deary -
A memory and a new way of presenting my poems!
One of my favorite things to do when I was younger was to go to the record store. At one time every mall had one and my hometown was no exception. Once there you could browse thousands of titles in multiple genres. The radio would always announce when a new title was going to be released and that day was always a special time. Whenever I got a new album I always went right to the lyrics sheet. I wanted to read the words almost as much as I wanted to hear the actual music. This was especially true if it was a story or concept album. Being a life long, die hard Rush fan there was always plenty of those finding into! The lyrics were poems to me and they have always fascinated me. I had an English teacher in High School who taught us poetry using songs by Journey, Sprngsteen and Gordon Lightfoot. It was life changing to me.
I want to do something similar to the lyrics sheet with my own poetry. I am going to compose and compile my poems into my own “lyrics” sheet. I am going to call this new presentation “Poetry Albums” and they will feature between seven and ten poems.
I hope everyone has a great day and that whatever inspires you comes to you in abundance!
T.S. Deary



























