Without a leading for this week, I searched through
several catch-all books. Not finding “April” in the lists, nor “Spring,” I put
them back in place. Abutting the last book I shelved, a thinnish hardback
standing there--without a title on the spine, or author—piqued my interest.
Pulled it down, and just guess what? A book entitled . . . serendipitously. . .
WHO TELLS THE CROCUSES IT’S SPRING?
I looked no further; this was it! The subtitle was
“Favorite Poems of the Four Seasons as published in Farm Journal. Compiled by
Pearl Patterson Johnson, published by Countryside Press, a division of Farm
Journal, Inc. Philadelphia, 1971."
“From the hundreds of poems printed in FARM JOURNAL
magazine over the past three decades, [here are] 135 of the most representative
seasonal verses. . . .” she said.
I'd purchased this book four years ago from The Purple
House in Eureka Springs—the hospital thrift store—for fifty cents.
Since April is National Poetry Month, I’ll print a few. If you wonder about the typography, the slashes denote new lines. Somehow, in posting, the lines are double-spaced. Which I don't like. So, until I learn how to make them single spaced, I'll use this format.
IT’S SPRING! IT’S SPRING! – by Mae Winkler Goodman
“Who tells the crocuses it’s spring?/ What calendar
informs the daffodils/ To bloom, or notifies the birds to sing,/ Or bids the
grass to blow across the hills?/ What messenger instructs the buds to break,/
Or violets to lift their purple heads?/ And yet they know. They know. This is
the hour/ When spring takes over. Let the winter pass--/ You cannot keep it
from the wistful flower, / You cannot hide it from the eager grass. / It’s
spring. It’s spring! The news has got around, / Spreading like fire across the
quickened ground.”
A RED-LETTER DAY – by Yetza Gillespie
“When every budding maple wears/ On every twig a
gilded locket, / When ponds are loud with clicking frogs/ Like marbles in a
small boy’s pocket, //
“When well-bred goldfinches ignore/ The ribaldries
that bluejays utter/ At picnics where the grass is spread/ With dandelion pats
of butter, //
“Then you may ring the calendar/ With scarlet, though
it shine or rain, / And run outside without your gloves, / For April has come
true again.”
DAWDLING WINTER – by Meryle Moore Simpson
“This backward spring reminds me of the way/ The
children used to think of everything/ At bedtime—any quick excuse to play/
Another hour: the drinks—remembering/ Small joys they had not told—prolonged
good-nights--/ Good-night, good-night, again, again, again./ Closing the door
and turning out the lights/ Was never final as it should have been./ A coyote,
wind, a cricket’s harmless noise/ Was cause to fret, and I had not the / heart/
To chasten them. Now winter time enjoys/ Playing a similar, slow counterpart: /
Reluctantly still dawdling in the snow/ Long past the hour for frosty days to
go.”
SPRING HOUSE CLEANING – by Blanche A. Hjerpe
“I’m short of breath, my heart beats fast/ When
nature is a-greening; / I’ll bet you think that I’m in love--/ It’s just from
spring house cleaning.”
May spring put a spring in your step, the aroma of
flowers to your nose and a smile on your face.
c 2015 by Pat Laster dba lovepat press
1 comment:
All such glories of spring! Love the It's
Spring one...and no fear of spring cleaning here. :)
Thank you for the lovely comments on my own blog. Here it is definitely "
April showers bring May flowera" as lots of dark and wet days. Yesterday beautitful but three days of rain returns today. I am ready for the spring deck sealing to be done and for potted flowers!
Post a Comment