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Poetry: Dive
In
Edited by Jim Richards, Meridian Poetry Editor
Through
traditional meter and rhyme, Bob Ferguson launches us into wonderful
territory. In his poems we dive into "the sea's green breast" and
explore the underwater world. We also become witnesses to Ophelia's
tragic dive to her death. On a lighter note, we dive into the space
between two friends who share a love for poetry. And finally, we soar
out of this world into celestial realms. Enjoy.
Diving the
Wall off Anchor Point
Grand
Cayman Island
Beneath the
sea's green breast, far
Where day and dark in twilight meet,
And with desire of moth for star,
I drop to where the corals greet
In timeless arms. Into a womb
Of living stone I narrow crawl,
Like dreams that pass through someone's tomb,
And birth out through the windowed wall
Into the things and thoughts of Time,
And that loveliness which alone
Knows joy in passion's fearful rhyme;
Abyss of water and black stone
Below, and some song singing me
Toward cobalt-blue eternity.
Ophelia
She'd draped
her cloak above the bracken fern
Which in profusion grew near where she stood,
And the yellowed eye of day did warm it
Where with a warmth her flesh no longer would.
Beneath the remnant ringlets of the pond,
Cloud-still and cold fair Ophelia lies,
Beyond our breath, above the silted stones,
Like winter stars that sleep in winter skies.
Some spectral hand of fleshless flesh has cast
Upon the surface, in petaled showers,
Pansies and rosemary for remembrance -
Love's grief writ in the language of flowers.
Where's the shame or limit to pain or tear
So borne, so shed in grief for one so dear?
Old Men Dream
the Best Dreams
for
Hugh
I think what
we love most of poetry,
Hugh, is delight of lovely words, it seems:
Treasures of color, shade, warmth and earth sounds,
Secreted in wee rivulets and streams --
Beauties of expression and remembrance,
Adornments to our souls, both rich and fair.
The rhyming words are our own little fays
With gay voices and strands of laughing hair,
Dancing by some far, old river, splashing
Esoteric moon-glints into our eyes,
Calling us by the names we knew before,
Where magic dreams, undreamt, anew arise.
We old men dream the best dreams, sure enough,
Our thread-worn haversacks filled with life's
stuff.
The World
Is Not Enough
The world is
not enough once we have dreamed
Dreams far beyond its realm of flesh and lies,
Past cosmic clouds, star-point stitched and seamed,
Where ancient things call out, and God replies
With new creation's hand: three feathered spheres
Hang veiled, in graduated fires refined,
Where God unwounds our wounds, uncries our tears,
Burns Stygian dross from hearts once blind.
The world is not enough to hide the face
Of God from any sweet-breathed child who yearns
For those fair-kindled flames of heaven's grace,
Or Father's love that like a candle burns
More sweet, more hot than when summers have
begun
As smiles hanging in the bedrooms of the
sun.
About the
Poet
Bob Ferguson
has published poetry in several journals, including The Lyric. He
works as Chief of Staff to a Pennsylvania congressman in Washington,
DC, and lives in Virginia. He is a member of the Mt. Vernon Virginia
Stake, and has been writing for over thirty years.
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