Blustery Tempest
By skinner_jennifer
- 2748 reads
Skeleton greenhouse
lies in pieces...glass
come loose at hands
of fierce beast,
fragments combined
with earth lie shattered
at edge of last years
generous strawberry patch,
In midst of all
this destruction
turbulent branches
torn from trees,
those that cling,
wave like madmen
standing hailing taxi
in angry tempest.
But! I do love to watch
howling February
shoot raindrops
against my window pane,
spitting like strings of pearls
that speak in foreign tongues,
not realizing they're telling me
of storms to come.
Image by pixabay free.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
I like turbulent branches and
I like turbulent branches and hailing taxis. We had similar ideas about the languages of things. I think you have summed up storminess very well. :)
- Log in to post comments
It is lovely to watch the
It is lovely to watch the power from safety, dryness and warmth isn't it? I take it it is your greenhouse that has suffered. I hope the clearing up isn't too difficult. Rhiannon
- Log in to post comments
You've caught the speed and
You've caught the speed and strength of your storm so well, with the quick rhythm but also lines like "fragments combined with earth lie shattered" have a beautiful sadness, a songlike lilt. Also "shoot raindrops/against my windowpain/spitting like strings of pearls, the alliteration of all the "p" sounds works really well. And branches waving like a madman's arms is a great image, brutal too as some of the arms lie on the ground. So much going on! And your last line, "storms to come", continues the sense of movement
- Log in to post comments
I too was very taken with the
I too was very taken with the image of the branches hailing taxis - brilliant idea! I'm sorry to hear about your greenhouse, hope you didn't lose too many things from inside. Also hoping you haven't suffered any more destruction over the weekend.
- Log in to post comments
I should have said - I hope
I should have said - I hope you can get a new greenhouse and can pick up the glass out of the soil.
- Log in to post comments
Don't despair! when we had an
Don't despair! when we had an allotment, someone had a greenhouse frame which they covered in thick clear polythene sheet? It worked fine! I think they had made a wood frame door (maybe the original got wrenched off like yours) a bit bigger than the door hole, and that was covered in the plastic too? They would lean it over to cover the opening and wedge it with planks dug into the ground at an angle so the wind couldn't get in. I think it's possible to buy special polythene which doesn't go opaque from being in the sunshine. there's lots of stuff about this sort of thing because of people making their own polytunnels? It might end up being a fun project :0)
- Log in to post comments
A very descriptive poem of a
A very descriptive poem of a fierce storm that has caught many unprepared and powerless to do anything except watching the pelting rain on the window panes, with its suggestion of further upheaval, and observe the extensive damage it caused.
Sorry to hear of the havoc inflicted on your irreparable greenhouse.
Luigi xx
- Log in to post comments