By phill doran
Author Notes | Blank verse on two opposite views of the desert, in 12-line sections. |
By phill doran
Author Notes | An exercise in Blank Verse on the theme of winter and small beasts ('meagre' is the UK spelling as is 'gray', I believe) |
By phill doran
A rhythmic slap and slither rasps the shore
and rolls along a curved, tanned hip of sand
where branded, stranded bathers beach beneath
their tilted, striped umbrellas -- tracking light,
like flowers in full bloom; exotic sprays.
Their bodies wink a message, moist in oils,
like beacons, buoys of shipwrecked men-of-war
aground on shards of guilt, deceit and lies.
She watches children crab along far rocks
where wrack and driftwood tangle in the shale,
and thoughts to leave return, much like a tide;
a steady beat of little form which ends
in thunder, splayed in torrents, thick with foam.
Beside her, sunk in dreams, her traitor falls
and rises on the ebb and flow of sleep,
adrift beneath her shadow as she stands.
She skirts along the water's hem of lace
as pearls of perspiration track her breast;
her slanted footprints weep, dissolve to sand;
diminished sails incline on inert waves.
Where seabirds drape the sky, like open books,
a borderline exists, the world divides;
a crossroad on a journey without maps
and, taking stock, she turns to face the sea.
The lazy skies are bloated, full of day
and streaked with broken reefs of barren clouds
as she descends, accepts the lapis mouth
of azure tongues which lick her heels, her thighs.
Like lust, the waters lap, engulf her heart --
rise up, conceal her throat, absolve her eyes
'til lungs concede, inhale; resolved, all while
a rhythmic slap and slither rasps the shore.
Author Notes | Note: the word 'buoy' is pronounced 'boi' or 'boy' i.e. the English way...no disrespect to American 'buw-ees' intended. |
By phill doran
Author Notes |
An exercise in blank verse: unrhymed iambic pentameter
In legend: Daedalus escaped from the island of Crete with his son Icarus by building wings for them both; fashioned out of wax and feathers. Although warned, Icarus flew too close to the sun, which melted the wax of his wings and he fell into the sea (in the area which now bears his name, the Icarian Sea near Icaria.) In this piece, Daedalus is saving Icarus not punishing him. |
By phill doran
Author Notes | The majority of this piece was written using words found on the lables of coffee tins, jars and associated items - I have just joined the dots...albeit not in the style of Horace. |
By phill doran
At noon, the season's slanted sun defines
a cider-yellow road with ashen banks.
A rutted bevel, like a slumbered snake,
it slithers through the grasslands, through the cleft
between the hills that summer burned away.
Nearby, below a span of whittled trees,
the leaves conduct a dry and hobbled dance
where husks corrode; their ripened spoils unbound
to burrow in the wealth of rotted earth
or snag upon the tangled manes of beasts.
Beneath this leafless latticework of boughs,
the amber hours track a breaching sun
which rests against a dapple-collared trunk
and sets the dun-dark bark in soft relief -
a pastel gild of mottle-flecked decay,
of lichen's eau-de-nil and whiskered moss.
A mellow haze unfolds, confounding tones
until the muted bronze of perished time
accumulates and permeates the soil -
the burnished tints of autumn's sombre brush.
The world exhales; the stilted sunlight sets
and, coddled, seeds content themselves to dream
while charcoal ribbons race from naked trees
and sharply bear away from day's descent.
Across the distant stubble, drowned in mist,
day flounders in sloe creeks - a darkness sprung
from deltas which advance a twilight sea.
Contrived in close conspiracies of shade,
a lace of frost succeeds the dying light
and, pinned with stars, the night consumes the road.
Author Notes |
This is a 30-line exercise in blank verse.
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