handfuls of striped hours
sky dimming and brightening
reading between lines
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
handfuls of striped hours
sky dimming and brightening
reading between lines
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
White rabbit, on a rainy day.
White rabbit, with a patch of gray
around one eye.
Where the cars park, out of place
among the trash cans — on his face
unbridled fear.
Who left him there, and drove away?
Abandoned him, on a bitter day
cold as their hearts?
Winter is near, though not here yet.
In the wild, this indoor pet
will not survive.
But, comes a man with bright blue eyes.
Comes a man who just (surprise!)
picks Rabbit up —
rescues him from noise and muck.
Four rabbit’s feet brought him good luck
and a new home.
Now, ears scritched and tummy fed,
curled up in his clean, warm bed,
White Rabbit dreams
of rainy days and cruel goodbyes,
of his good fortune — and he sighs,
as rabbits do.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
He ignored them resisted
hopes concern ideas
about what should could be
directed outward anger was
a different matter altogether
blameless he would never change
though he considered
tearing down cutting off
what flourished beyond reason
pinching back unopened buds
his will a strict diet imposed
on a reluctant gourmand
whose diminishment he believed
was no more than his due
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
she taught me how
to say these things I need
to say to write a word a line
a poem and how I already knew
how she taught me to listen to
my own sounds settling like ash
or butterflies landing on my hair
hands eyelids fluttering white
as blossom drifts in May when
the sun heals and taught me to
see that see how see why
a story will tell itself one way
or another it will tell you how
let it tell me she said and before
one more November sun had set
she showed she taught me how
© 2020 by Hannah Six
She imagined she saw
the clouds catch fire
an unlikely conflagration
in the western sky
mountains & valleys absorbed
by violet pools of rarified air
at dawn her candle burns
still in the dark wisdom
a lingering dream
of half-remembered freedom
perhaps time is an estuary
exhaling a mist of fragile hopes
ebbing & flowing with the tides
channels opaque as miracles
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Snow will fall and fall
Enfolding this bristling world
Silently yielding
Softening acute edges
Clarifying the complex
© 2020 by Hannah Six
You are right
(in your wrongness).
Am I wrong
to support your right?
Does helping you hurt
hurt me?
Or does my help
help?
Water and flame
— opposing
— we cancel make
nothing
of each other and
how it is
right
I cannot say knowing
only deeply
that it is so.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
a second spring
gathering in nearly-leafless trees
the mists of morning rich
with ancient songs
of miles to go and hard
frosts soon to come
of truth warm
as midsummer’s eve
of truth cold
as a February lake
of truth that to prefer either is
to embrace our discontent
so bodies black against a sky
blank as an empty page
they call and swoop yielding as one
then outmanoevering
the paling sun recede southward
to more benevolent fields
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Cerulean (red shade) gazing
into and through branches
newly revealed standing
ankle deep in asters
and storm-stripped leaves
how the expansive sky
embraces communities
of clouds allowing welcoming
the northeasterly breeze building
cascading over russet hills
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Last time we were up
where the night was
bright with stars & laughing
stone fountains
yet always looking back
we swam like catfish caught
in our own ripples swelling
like waves after dark
& practicing an innocence
we had been unaware of —
no one had explained how
pracarious how far we had
to fall before we met
the ground again
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Solo down & blue
you slouch
like 100 years
of pale dust
rivulets striping
cracked leather hands
boots lucky
you with a shrug
or wink say never
do stars fall crash
& burn
may be but first
they fly
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Counting the months until
spring leaves unfurl though
the hills and fields are green
Anticipatory winter raining
on autumn’s rich parade
Would summer be as exquisite
if it lingered to the last with
a prolonged introduction
to temper February’s fade
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
We are losing
patience a virtue
we are told we are losing
touch our cool
calm and collected we wait
our faith fingers crossed
pens in hand engines revving
unwilling to lose
our temper our appetite
for justice piqued our footing
on solid ground this is not
a losing battle merely
an uphill trudge
through uncleared brush
and these years passed slowly
and we will rest
when this is over and we can’t
lose for winning
which may not be everything
but for us it is enough
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Arkansas! she said. Pity. He seemed so nice.
And with that, she turned her attention elsewhere,
toward people who were not leaving for Arkansas.
Nearby, a woman shot into the sun, shading the lens
with her hand. Try as she might, she was unable to
capture the day’s pervasive sense of intimacy suffused
with estrangement. High clouds spread thin fingers
across the sky, while a yellowjacket sipped, halfheartedly,
an abandoned glass of rose. It was not to his taste.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
slowly uncurling
smooth pink shell warmed by the sun
irresistible
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Sometimes the clearest night
foretells a torpid rain
like beads the clouds
wind through a waking dream
tracing the narrow
hours of midday
some fervent some spent
shamelessly
seeking the silver whisper
of the glass
no miracles recalled no
false hopes no blame
just clouds & birds like beads
strung through the trees
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
It was a leaf red or orange or
golden as an autumn day that brushed
against my hair as we wandered
up the road that landed
in my hair there in the orchard
on the road toward home
while we were walking
It was a leaf caught on a cold damp
wind whipping off the bay
caught in tangled branches on
a golden autumn day
as we made our way toward home
the lane was dappled
by the sun and a leaf caught
in my hair there in the orchard
on the road toward home
where we were walking
It was a not a leaf
caught in my wind-tossed hair
that web of gold bleached by
the summer sun and not a leaf
that brushed against me
as we made our slow way home
there amid the apple trees
when I reached up
to brush a leaf away
It was a wasp
busy doing what wasps will do
on the just-cool brink of fall
who stung me
as most wasps will too when
one assumes they are just leaves
caught up in wind-whipped hair
who stung me there
between my fingers
in the unkempt orchard we passed
through on the road toward home
when we were walking
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Wasps’ nests hang empty.
Listening to the cat breathe,
while restless leaves fret.
Quiet as a winter’s day,
wide blue sky hungry for song.
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Worse than meaningless —
Built on wet sand, lies collapse
When the tide rolls in.
Like breathing underwater,
The foolish go down trying.
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Darkness somehow pleasant
as dawn cold
drizzle wetting leaves
turning gradually
bronze beneath
starless skies so solid not even
a hint of rose
smudged the horizon
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
He knows somewhere
she knows his name
she knows the width of his
scarred knuckles the power
in those brown shoulders
freckled by the sun
his charm a blade
so sharp she knows the scent
of his warm body
in the early hours and the deep
vibration of his voice
in the dark snapping her back
from her dreams
in the silence before midnight
when she feigns sleep
and she knows better
than to answer
his question with the truth
so she says Nothing
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Again your eyes gazing
challenging
through windows large and small
look away just try to look
away those breasts lips
thighs abundance of pillowy flesh
falling smothering consuming
in every scrumptious way
but why do you
paint pose display why serve
yourself on this a crystal platter
cradled gently between
my interlaced fingers
does the cactus flower of fear
bloom nightly in your heart
urging asking
will you see me and will you
see me and you are
ravishing and I say yes
and you are here spread
like a feast before me the hunger
stalking but you are not
prey
and you are
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
After the fog rose
small full splashes
of truth mud laced
with gold love
curled wryly as a smile
catching up
with your eyes
it was almost as good
as too much
© 2020 by Hannah Six
The relief of dancing
shivering
in a brassy chill
on the edge of rapture
drawing near
while standing still
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
What is it asking you
to do, the wind?
Restless, yearning, it circles,
stalks among the trees.
If you could understand
its language of whispers,
murmurs, sighs, how would you
answer its call? Though garish
light demands attention,
there has never been a better
time than now, tonight, to listen,
to allow its secrets to move,
move through, you — because
the urgent voice
of a northwesterly wind
is easier to discern in the dark.
© 2020 by Hannah Six
Grandmother singing
A desertscape
A goldfinch
A yellow envelope
A bracelet of blue beads
with a charm that reads: Free
A faux French box
A jewelry bag
A child’s drawing of a bird
(that child is now a man)
A pink hairbrush
A pink comb
Sunscreen, creams and oils
(lavender, geranium, melaleuca)
A fitness watch
A granny square
A blue handkerchief
(edges hand-rolled and stitched)
The Wanderer
Coming Home
Pride and Prejudice
Radical Acceptance
An amethyst ring
And this.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
Emerging
from violet depths
of writing words
often are few
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
She thought maybe his time had come, at last —
and neither burger nor BP did him in.
His eyes lost focus, and his voice grew thin.
She prayed he would go easy, and go fast.
Imagine consenting to become his wife,
submitting to his undisguised abuse,
ensnared in shame, unable to get loose,
trapped in plain sight, in that unhappy life.
Still, the mountains rise, the valleys sink.
To be set free was an enticing dream,
but she is not fortunate as she seems, though
trimmed in gold, and draped in silk and mink.
Another term? She can’t see how she’ll cope —
a blue tsunami is her last, best hope.
(c) 2020 by Hannah Six
distant surf bellows
defeated by wind and rain
fog, like silk, obscures
Alas, enough!
Summer’s lush foliage
How can we fight —
cool dusky groves
how defeat — this
gradually fading glowing
shape-shifting enemy,
like October spring
alien to every
one cricket singing himself
common understanding?
to sleep
© 2020 by Hannah Six
children’s high voices
falling leaves
nearby a couple argues
again
an emptiness opens
at my feet
a quiet waiting space
tomorrow
laughing playing working
together
every breeze confetti bright
against green grass
a crash a shout
again
chairs scrape wood
and on a blue screen
two grown men berate
each other and we
sigh like the breeze
scattering this
momentary sadness across
a carpet of red and gold
because our waiting
is nearly over and the quiet
space is shrinking
like ice in warming water
© 2020 by Hannah Six