Watching dark clouds swell
No escaping this storm
Rivers will run with ink
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Watching dark clouds swell
No escaping this storm
Rivers will run with ink
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
They asked for time
so lips downturned
he berates revives revises
his old stories every day
a ragged breath
they promised change
a shame considering
his mind sea-level and
neglected as it is
they wanted silence
and we will place a braid
of roses in his name
some steely dawn
then turn and wander off
a lifetime’s work
like wet sand underfoot
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
November beckons promising
freedom
in shades of gray & brown
summer’s baroque
branches & vines stripped
down to necessities
at last respite
from July’s cruel glare
August’s desultory meanderings
harvested the hopes
of growing things striving upward
fulfilled the vows earnest
& feigned of an intricate web
in whose center we are not
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
spiraling golden leaves
marmalade cat observes autumn
season of falling birds
© 2020 by Hannah Six
in the vines
gold is not sun
but shot
with a current
of light
red not
blood sweet yet
berries still
grow sparse
brushstrokes
and there a touch
of blue soon
it will be
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
With a pale pink kiss
gray light scratches
at the windows
A long procession
of dim marble nights
has made shallow
cover for the moon
Now sunrise comes
too soon emptying
the sky of stars
© 2020 by Hannah Six
layered with haze fallow fields
subtle gentle ancient
history carved in sweet acacia
antennae gold with pollen
the mighty thrumming
of 10,000 powerful hearts
a sound like lingering
day like endless ocean
or poems without words
that may or may not
return across those waves
a sunrise waits
across miles of yes floating
at water’s edge reluctant
to encounter each rapacious gust
urging begin
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Now and then
you wake
a heavy blanket of realization
weighing you down
and you want to close your eyes
and you long to drift back to sleep
to escape into the sweet softness
of your dreams
but you wake and are awake
and so must do
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Perfectly equal
(give or take a few minutes)
Nature pauses rests
Balanced between dark
and light between warm and cool
— if only we could
© 2020 by Hannah Six
What is at stake:
kindness
the kind that remembers yesterday & today
without forgetting tomorrow
the ability to consider our world in its entirety
not peeled & sectioned like a bitter grapefruit
sprinkled with sugar to trick the tongue
a future none of us wants to inhabit, a featureless
zone of productivity, profit & loss
more than we care to admit
the quotidian details of our common experience
the surprise of a sweetly-dimpled smile
the pleasurable ache of falling into bed
after a long day’s work
the uneven wood of a well-used tabletop
the comforting brush of wool against feet & hands
the transcendent breath of unfiltered sunset
What is at stake:
the beginning, middle & end — every heart
every atom thrumming & vibrating
keeping time with our own
That is everything
we stand to lose
© 2020 by Hannah Six
before delving
into the twilight depths
of your forgiveness
or otherwise
take time to seek
comfort in kind
questions gentle answers —
the way a single cloud
perfects
a pristine summer sky
and autumn’s faintest
hues enhance the green
September woods
how bittersweet nostalgia
sometimes heightens
pure contentment
and shattered hearts
find they can hold
love enough
for all the world
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
I met a man on horseback,
who said that he was right.
His armor shone like silver,
his horse was milky white.
So, I believed him.
He insisted up was down,
lectured that dark was light —
but his sword was so bejeweled,
his horse so clean and white!
(I was naïve, then.)
Soon, I learned his truths were lies,
his honor belied his spite.
His armor hid a bitter heart,
and that horse was prone to bite.
He had deceived me.
So, beware of heroes in the woods,
proud champions of the fight.
Hearts glistening like solid gold,
are often pure pyrite.
You can believe me.
© 2020 by Hannah Six
You are flying over water
blue as a fairytale
deep and comfortable
as familiar company
attending to every spirit
of the west a hammock
of crescent moon
cradling the early stars
a well-mannered temperate
evening of liquid reflections
and soft-edged smiles
gentle haze of smoke
mingling with the scent
of seaweed perfume
of long-lost summers
and immeasurable possibility
of guitar chords and voices
floating into the redwoods
while your eyes grow heavy
of sleeping loosely on cool
damp earth safely ensconced
in the lavish poetry of
the sea singing you home
© 2020 by Hannah Six
This afternoon the sky darkened to gray,
behind a haze of smoke and cloud cover
from some hurricane moving up the coast.
That happens often this time of year.
At outdoor tables, people arrived and left,
worked and laughed, knowing our brightest
months are winding down, loathe to
relinquish summer’s delicious freedoms.
Soon the days will draw close, first and last
light consumed by expanding shadows, and
we will abandon ourselves to timeless rhythms,
revolving gradually until to face the sun again.
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Falling leaves comfort
the evening breeze,
a shower of radiant
sunset sparks
blazing briefly in
their frame of trees,
whirling silently
through the darkness,
weaving, for the world,
a carpet of flames
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Confidently, they bustle about, smirking
like people in-the-know, all sunlight and
sparkle, spit-and-polish, secure
in their importance, they disregard portentious
storm clouds, commanding night’s looming
depths to part, so they may possess and profit
but they forget: we are mere apparitions,
unaware of our invisibility, tenuous lives
unspooling as we hurtle toward dénouement
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
astonishing cocktail
of stars lavished on
a cool and curious world
dim reflections not quite
rippling the polished
surface of 3 a.m. —
this is where answers are
lost and found
mere dreams faded
illuminations concealed
by time in the narrowest
margins of day
© 2020 by Hannah Six
& I will take all your stories
of mushrooms growing wild
on lonely stone beaches
& rotary telephones hiding
like mice in cubbies carved
out of the walls
& even your lies
how the ocean froze hard
as a street & a tree helped
a boy keep a secret from a girl
near her cellarless house where
an earthquake once fixed
eight uneven stairs & the roof
& bless you with ten thousand truths
how lightning flared through your
small attic window as bright as the sun
through an old blue glass vase
& bless you with ten thousand truths
how you walked 15 miles on a cold
summer highway singing old songs
in a downpour of stars & you knew
& that night you two fell in love
& I will take all your stories
& even your lies
& bless you with ten thousand truths
& bless you with ten thousand truths
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
time swells and contracts
underwater reflections
each hour a surprise
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
That sky blue as blue
belonged to everyone same as
when nothing was the same
after like daggers
we told those we tell our stories
at odds with forgetting
& there & there it was
before when we were ever changed
over & over again
you see now began then
but that day does not belong to us
does it
& we looked looked away
then could not stop seeing people
like birds planes
like snow eyes closed
we remember not all belong to us
we tell them anyway
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Some days
there are no words
only
soft warm
the air
like
where it lifts
from the corner
and in the middle
distance
© 2020 by Hannah Six
How birch leaves flutter
And paper wasps tend their nests
See where spring remains
© 2020 by Hannah Six
The trees can feel it coming
but do not abscise
their leaves from fright foregoing
autumn splendors.
Neither will I.
Gray days and frigid nights
of gently fizzing snow
hold little terror
only time
and time
enough to grow
somnolent and vague
in need of spring which will appear
at its own pace. You see?
The trees can feel it coming.
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Anticipating wind-chimes,
she was amazed to find
butterflies — silent, engrossed
in spiraling pas de deux,
on the rising breeze.
© 2020 by Hannah Six
5. Ode to A__
I can still picture you, gray hair cut en brosse
(I thought that might make you laugh),
those thick, black-framed glasses you wore
long after/before they became fashionable,
not too tall, not too heavy,
but not otherwise,
in sturdy work clothes that would have
looked at home on a farm, or in a repair shop.
Your business was neither, and, as it turned out,
it was not even yours. Or was it? No matter.
How Dickens would have loved you.
In those days, in a different kind of world,
one found a job to help pay for college.
I was such a one, and you offered such a job.
When I worked quickly, you suggested
I slow down, so I could earn more money.
When a situation turned ugly, you stepped in,
did my work and cleaned up long before I arrived.
In those days, in that different world,
when one fractured a wrist,
one visited the family physician.
I was such a one, with such a wrist.
So, you took me to your own doctor, and insisted
on paying for my care.
Then, because I could not work one-handed,
you offered me a better job, and a raise.
Were you kind? Yes, to me.
Were you cruel? I suspect so.
And you were steady, and funny, and flawed.
And you were generous, and withdrawn.
But I did not recognize you, your complexity
— for self-centered youth inhabits a world
of supporting characters. And now I wonder
if I can truthfully say that I remember you,
as you deserved to be remembered.
All this, and more, is true.
© 2020 by Hannah Six
a deep slant of golden autumn light
cuts the dry air a door is closing
on summer but autumn is slipping
in through an open window
outdoors a hum of conversation
friends and lovers meet sip coffee
for a while then move back into
the stream of their days
some wear long pants and sleeves
others arrive in shorts and dresses
in this time of transition
we do not yet know which way to lean
tethered by trickling words I linger
among shape-shifting blue shadows
while other lives pegged out in the breeze
ripple and snap all around
this one has birth control it’s so fucking cool
that one is disgusted by casseroles
even the word which sounds like
English people trying to speak German
and all the while an insect hum brightens
the air the iridescent wings of dragonflies
carrying countless tiny rainbows
high into the bright September sky
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
briefly through a door
propped open
to the summer wind
she is
there in semi-darkness
arms raised folding
a fitted sheet by herself
curious yet disinterested
lost in the dreams
one dreams when folding
hundreds of towels
in bleach-scoured air
for a moment
our eyes meet and
we are the same familiar
with the stillness
of a purloined moment
of solitude in a day
framed by obligations
© 2020 by Hannah Six
hold closely the unwritten book of ancient landscapes
and words
long since forgotten, the droplets of pewter
sky and soil-sweetened mist along the path you stroll
alone, those bird-bright mornings when music swells
like light through a window
hide them well, this collection of shiny trinkets
that caught your raven’s eye
then, when a storm approaches, take them out,
and hold them, one by one, let their weight
lay heavy in your palms, and consider the possibility
that you will not drown in the waves that spin overhead,
tangled in their lace-edged labyrinth of foam,
but glide gently over each crest, sliding easily into
troughs where the blue-diamond sea unfurls,
sun-warmed and smooth as polished stone
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Before we lost our sight, we found
beauty in beginnings,
answers in a low-slung moon
round as a summer peach,
faith in mornings veiled by rain,
clear as frosted glass,
and when the light grew dim, we dove,
deep into the lakes of our closed eyes,
slept, unseen, in canopies of leaves,
and, like leopards, we refused
to change our striking spots —
before the first twig snapped,
before the forests fell,
before truth was reviled, christened
obscene — boundless, we
made our wildest mistakes, indulging
in the innocence of our wrongs.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
miles and miles of mirrors
and a brittle wind scraped
miles and miles of mirrors
our unshielded land just as
miles and miles of mirrors
the rains began in earnest
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six