On Golden Pond
By Silver Spun Sand
Tue, 06 Mar 2012
- 2068 reads
14 comments
The milky-way sets
in the west; pendulous...
languid – a zillion
fairy-lights entangled
in the willow overhangs a pond,
and to the east – nudging
the horizon – Sirius;
a beacon – flashes
orange, green,
and red.
Bold Orion –
astride his steed
dons his dazzling belt,
as the moon, moons down;
vespers etched upon her face,
while wafts on the breeze –
the sound of the stars, going at it,
hammer and tongs; hell-bent
on rearranging themselves
as evening drips away
on golden pond.
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Comments
I don't know if I have this
Permalink Submitted by skinner_jennifer on
I don't know if I have this right Tina, but I do
believe you wrote this one about your own pond in
your garden last night. I only say this, because
the moon and stars were shining so clearly last
night. The planets were so close, you could almost
touch them.
Your wonderful descriptions in this poem, relate
such beauty in the sky, I loved the idea of:-
the sound of the stars, going at it,
hammer and tongs; hell-bent
on rearranging themselves
as evening drips away
on golden pond.
Loved the title too.
Jenny.
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There are very few stars I
There are very few stars I recognize Tina and you made these constellations shine for me. Starry nights are a wonder. Something I also enjoy when I get the chance. Thank you so much for sharing your experience. :) Pia
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A Beautiful poem, deeply
A Beautiful poem, deeply evocative. A few words stuck out as a little odd for the feel of the poem 'zillion', 'moons' (as a verb). But even the physical shape of the poem is really effective. Great job!
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We don't get stars where I'm
We don't get stars where I'm from, the smog blocks them all out!
But seriously, lovely words creating fantastic images.
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Hi Tina, I thought of you on
Hi Tina, I thought of you on Monday night when getting a quick star-gazing lesson from young pesky while in Balmaha on the eastern shore of Loch Lomond. So glad you put that night into words. We may have been hundreds of miles apart but we shared the warmth of the stars in our hearts and endured the cold of the night for as long as possible.
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I first learnt to star-gaze
Permalink Submitted by MistakenMagic on
I first learnt to star-gaze when on a coach coming back from Newcastle during Freshers week. The girl sitting next to me that taught me all about Sirius and Orion ended up becoming my best friend here in Durham - thanks for taking me back, Tina ;-)
Magic xxx
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