So quietly, the desert
smoothes all wrinkles
from the night
Only a rustle, a hiss,
as ignorance steals away.
Even in darkness,
truth sustains trust.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
So quietly, the desert
smoothes all wrinkles
from the night
Only a rustle, a hiss,
as ignorance steals away.
Even in darkness,
truth sustains trust.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Flooded skies sweet
and serious as tonic
empty as no response
bulbs flash some remain
unfulfilled flat
regretful the new arrivals
depart balancing their
blades of yellowed grass
like nesting wasps
leaving certain promises
untended to hatch alone
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
we knew all as equal
misunderstanding what would come
every heartbreak devastation
each joy beyond compare
until we learned to see more
closely to take a wider view —
miraculous forests underfoot
where stands of mosses soared
vast planes of river stones
safeguarding the secrets of ages
and astounding the kindness of
strangers sustaining us more reliably
than even our greatest passions
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Swimming dusk coffee-dark
air like silver sparrows
we breathed
rain morning puddles
mountainsides blue
as a noon sky pine-serrated
ridges looming
blocking the last rays
of red dust sunset
on our tongues
the taste of iron & midnight
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
we drove northwest
toward a distant
dark smudge of granite
through low oak-studded
folds resting golden
as fallen pears
in the full midday sun
katydids rasped messages
in complex code
urgent answers
to the problem of rain
which would pass
to the south or slide
down the eastern slopes
if it fell at all
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
A little bit uncomfortable.
A tiny bit of darkness around the edges.
A missing. A yearning.
A grief that nibbles from time to time
at your insides like a mouse —
not mean spirited, not intending harm.
That’s just what grief does.
It plays in the background, like cicadas
in summer. Like a radio on low volume.
Every now and then, the music surges,
an advertisement blares,
catching your attention. You notice it,
slightly puzzled, and then it fades,
gradually, into the background again.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
The day came when dogs
grew so accustomed to face masks
that they no longer growled
suspiciously at friendly neighbors
we too stopped seeing them
though they were worn mostly
& learned to speak more clearly
to smile with our eyes
grocers once devoted to
brand-name goods now stocked
oddly-labeled off-brand soaps
& imported hand sanitizers
& finding a few boxes of our favorite
pasta on a store’s shelves
was cause for sotto voce cheers
and an unobtrusive victory dance
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
To the south rain threatens
looming darkly and when
the clouds finally break
the drops tap urgent fingers
on our windows dissolving
into liquid gray twilight
depleted by the storm
the mind falters wears thin
longs to turn to the west
bronzed and mellow in the sun
and still the days arrive
one after another
each revealing answers
to questions best posed
only in sleep and those
indecipherable messages
even were we willing to admit
to their truth ask more
and more of us
with every passing day
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
intimate petals
freshly exposed paper-white
faces uptilted
testing the dried-daffodil
scent of impending August
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Patiently the page
waits and the pen
while I wash bowls
fold towels
and walk the dog
house in order then
and out of chores
I wander to my desk
where aqua lines
lay tranquil
and undisturbed
providing structure for
my struggling words
a landing place
for stories notes
and poems until
the day they find
their proper homes
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
noon’s harsh glare
softens cooling
into welcome dusk
the world falls away
how many restless
hours we spend
settling becoming
ourselves again
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Barefoot in cool grass
Rising like smoke, voices twine
Sunset paints treetops
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six & Denise Wyant
he found himself in the house
alone reading yesterday’s news
at the breakfast-littered kitchen table
taking one last sip he glanced up
at the pale walls dotted with
those small delicate things
women seemed obliged to own
tiny portraits in ornate silver frames
his grandmother’s sampler
slightly unravelled the dream had faded
into sleep once it was
miraculous an effulgent vision
plucked on impulse from
an overhanging branch a stolen rose
clutched thorns and all in trembling hands
with all the promise of spring it began
then summer and autumn nothing
lasts forever he thought but perhaps
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
deciding what to do
with missing
wings
when I think of
when I flew
away
years ago clouding
my eyes peace
rushing in my ears
the danger is
in landing
mistakenly
among hours
extravagant
with music
when silence
would be
the wiser choice
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
the desert floor is strewn
with splinters
of broken sky reflecting
an unwonted haze
& this day
persists sundrenched stinging
we shield our eyes
gaze upward concerned
who among us failed to listen
who was spared fear & regret
while a smudge low
on the horizon bloomed
and spread vivid as a consuming
grief inbibing clouds & stars
& this day
persists immeasurable
an unwelcome guest a heaviness
in the heart so shameful
we dare not look
we dare not look
away
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
another immobile evening
brightens and obscures
while we wander
the curious struggle as ever
overshadowing uninformed
dreams piercing the fog
a staccato confusion falling
like footsteps on the pavement
when did we first
glimpse a ripple
how to listen
so others may hear
where will it settle
all this when we are gone
and sleep long-anticipated
seizes and drifts to a standstill
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
then there was the dark one
most familiar by moonlight
long after the blessed
and the good drifted off
to a favorite song words
familiar as a nettle’s sting
sustenance with a secret
worth keeping
waiting for waiting
on midnight’s hushed shore
for an uninvited guest
who never failed to disappoint
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Submerged
stories swimming
toward the surface
holding their breath
stubbornly
refusing to emerge
all you can do is
sit on the banks
and wait
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Quickly, slow hours pass
Orange cat dreams of forests
We wonder: How soon?
Prowling among lost pages
Night descends like yesterday
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
If I could tell you just one thing, I would
tell you about the light before a storm, glittering
with suppressed energy, colors heightened,
shapes defined, as clouds collapse over one another
on the western rim — the birds’ bacchanalian chorus,
the crickets’ and katydids’ and cicadas’
frenzied whir and buzz — then
silence.
A far-off wind rumbles low, growing ever louder,
rolling over the fields, and breaking over the trees,
just moments before the first drop falls,
soon a torrent. How air becomes liquid, drowning
the dessicated world, until you wonder
how breathing is even possible.
Surely nothing can survive this falling flood.
And, for a moment, some ancient animal
deep inside panics — anxious, claustrophibic,
desperate to flee — then
silence.
In a blink, each droplet flashes its captured sunlight,
and the renascent world blazes with incandescent steam.
A single bird calls, and then another.
One cricket tests his wings.
If I could tell you just one thing, I would tell you this.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Dreaming of liberty?
Remember, freedom looks
nothing like a 250-year-old daydream.
Real freedom evolves
and the truly-free evolve with it,
accepting and adapting to new ways
of thinking and being, rather than clinging
to faded myths and half-truths.
That willingness to change may be
the essential nature of independence.
Or, on the other hand, perhaps
it is simply essential.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Do you wonder how it feels
to be desired?
That’s OK.
Do you miss your family
and the people
you called friends?
That’s OK, too.
Missing is much easier
than comfort
or even love
which can be a bed of nails
or just a pebble in your shoe.
Because the end of a thing
always leaves
a trace of itself
behind —
A handkerchief
hiding in a sock drawer.
A song suddenly missing
from a well-loved LP —
only crackling silence
filling the space
where music once was.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Without warning
everything slumps
toward night except
he does not
swaying among these
rocking masts breath
tepid frail complex
as spring truth
fraying at the seams
a needle of arctic wind
piercing the skyline
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six