A Fox In A Moon Night
By onemorething
- 1879 reads
Moon crouched
in the mouth of night,
and though leaden, burned
new stars into the face of a fox;
mirrors that shone
over wordless tracks,
where the earth brooded
around the warp and contort
of the roots of all things.
She has an ear for the worm,
an eye for the moth, death,
a shadow confesses ---
but who has tricked who, in fact,
when this is the transience of life.
The world is brittle;
its black valleys,
the parched gulch,
dig and bury,
dig and bury,
dig and bury.
Clouds prowl the sky
in chiffon, what was left
unexplored, undreamed,
the contours of faith unhoped,
and yet, with morning,
hoped again.
A Fox In A Moon Night is from here: https://tinyurl.com/2tz2h5ab
- Log in to post comments
Comments
"... death, a shadow confesses.."
Ethereal, full of shadows... A wonderful fox in the moonlight. Just gorgeous..
- Log in to post comments
Clouds prowl the sky
Clouds prowl the sky
in chiffon, what was left
unexplored, undreamed,
the contours of faith unhoped,
and yet, with morning,
hoped again.
Those lines stood out for me. Iove the idea of the clouds prowling the sky...just like the fox. In fact the weather has been perfect for cloud watching this past week, especially when high up on the ridgeway, clouds are breathtaking, just like your poem Rachel.
Really evocative.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
This is absolutely stunning
This is absolutely stunning onemore. Was it inspired by the pic?
- Log in to post comments
They were made for each other
They were made for each other!
- Log in to post comments
This wonderful poem is our
This wonderful poem is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day!
Please share/retweet if you enjoyed it as much as I did
- Log in to post comments
hope again, is always good.
hope again, is always good.
- Log in to post comments
I love the idea of Faith
I love the idea of Faith being like clouds!
- Log in to post comments
drop capitals?
Lovely poem but if I were you I would drop all punctuation and capitals you have little enough already. The poem the appearance could show better and more attractive. and the poem read more fluent. Well that's just me. Merely a suggestion.
John Maisefield wrote a beautiful) ballad Reynard the Fox. The masters always astound one.
Cheers & Nolan
- Log in to post comments