SOUTHEAST ALASKAN SUNSET
Oil On Canvas by UT1
Oil On Canvas by UT1
Those little mosses that press forth—
what are they thinking
in their eyeless, earless, tasteless world;
they yawn into dawn;
who told them to be just moss?
In our own little biome
we traverse our inner courtyard,
round and round.
We break the rules, stretch the rules,
keep the rules
in our own little biome-niche:
time.
We walk the perimeter—
its edge—
borderless, fenceless,
invisible barbs from which we are defenseless.
Time.
When it rains the rains fall,
when it snows the snows fall—
or is that simply singular:
snow,
rain?
that’s all,
each droplet one in the sea,
each flake one in the sea:
Humanity:
you, me:
hair, lashes, skin,
bone, teeth, flesh
to meet the molecules
to meet the cells
that splash and sing among
the DNA
(to meet the solemn moon in its rising).
That’s what I am
barking in the shadows
punctual (right on time)
one tree in this great universal petri dish
forest.
© April 12, 2012 by UT2
Pastel On Paper by UT1
He is above all,
yet, He—the second Person
of the Trinity—in the fullness of time
became low—as animals looked on—born in a barn.
What mere mortal man could have dreamed up such a scene?
Wholly God, wholly man
Holy God, a Holy Man—
God is above all,
and being above all,
above all,
does not—would not—
force Himself or His plan
on mortal man. Indeed,
God is a gentleman.
Therefore, when I tell the Christmas story
of God—so willingly shedding His glory
for a while—exchanging home and throne
for a manger and a cross: for God so loved the world—
I do so in the same Spirit
not as prosecutor, not as proselytizer
but more as Paul—
who as Saul
had once persecuted the Christians,
who as Saul had once seen the blinding light in the desert—
not as judge and jury,
not as cross examiner or crucifier,
not even defense attorney
but as Paul singing from prison
and Silas—
praying for his persecutors and as such saying
God is a gentleman.
© December 15, 2010 by UT2
Charcoal On Paper by UT1
1
What is poetry?
The skunk curled up in the feed bucket?
Or you as you unwittingly carry it down
from 6 to 9,
set the bucket on the flat of the flatbed?
You watch it scurry, a bit shocked,
that is, the skunk.
2
We have just gotten back with a load of sawdust from Maywood Furniture Factory on Bulb Ave.
Or was that Thompson?
The dust would be covered over all our clothes.
At home
my dad would take a broom and sweep me off.
We breathe in lots of fine dust-
fine indeed–
as well as ammonia.
One day my draft notice comes, one day
I guess as it should have been:
it was fine.
I trade my shovel for a rifle.
© October 9, 2013 by UT2