Tuesday, June 25, 2019

Uninvited Guests

A lifetime ago, before the flood that still bedevils our cabin, we fed the birds. And other critters as it turned out.



Uninvited Guests


Late summer at the cabin
and we scatter birdseed
for the last of the warblers.

Only a grizzled turkey
wanders by, pecking
at the milo and cracked corn.

At dark a young buck
trips the yard light, finds
the bonanza before a raccoon

bullies him back from the food,
intent on stuffing his own mouth.

Come morning, the mixture
"Guaranteed to attract cardinals,
finches, juncos and jays"

is shelved for the season
and perhaps permanently

as the Tom steps through thin grass,
wattle swaying, hoping for a handout.



Marilyn Aschoff Mellor

Monday, June 17, 2019

Unbuttoned

Peonies still bloom along the fence line of our condo, a sign of this year's late spring. I remember many a Memorial Day when these flowers waited to be snipped and placed on graves of those we wished to remember. Irreverent thoughts got the better of me on more than one occasion.



Unbuttoned


Peonies, ants still clinging,
cut each spring for cemetery plots.

Voluptuous blooms
shameless for Memorial Day

like a coquette's rouged cheeks,
blushing pink

or matted a swan-white.
Swaying bodies, slender stems

graced the graves
of my grandpa and uncles

smiling beneath those blossoms,
pendulous and perfumed.



Marilyn Aschoff Mellor

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

Maple Syrup Time

A family reunion of sorts took place this weekend for my granddaughter's high school graduation. One conversation, started by my daughter from London, centered around maple syrup and the fact that most of it originates either in the US or Canada.

Below is another "Found Poem," a poem coaxed from a prose piece, that happens to be about maple syrup and the changing springtime.



Maple Syrup Time

                       Astro Bob, "Full Broken
                       Moon Shines Tonight and
                       Friday," Duluth News
                       Tribune, 4/18/19


Sugarbushing
catches then passes winter
in woods slightly out of line.

Flower moss blooms
from broken snowshoes,
and the Egg Moon of April

traces sprouting frogs. Snow
on the ground and ground phlox
reflects a pinkish-orange horizon.

Pause the moment
as the weather remains suspect
on a tilted earth with two moons rising.



Marilyn Aschoff Mellor

Sunday, June 2, 2019

Apples to Oranges

The 2019 Hurricane Season officially started yesterday, June 1st. But the devastation done by storms in prior years lingers on.

Massive flooding in the Midwest, currently, dominating the news, carries similar calamitous results. Take it from somebody who knows.



Apples to Oranges


No storm surges or tidal flows,
no gale force gusts
lash our lake up North.

Here, ill-tempered winds
kick up white-caps,
act like a fist-pounding toddler

enough to jostle bass boats and push
clueless canoeists against a far shore

send lily pads pitching on swells,
and fish hustling to the calm below.

But down South, oceans
barrel through Gulf Coast doors.

                       *

A cloudburst floods the forest.

Our brimming lake overspills
banks, and seeps under doorsills,
sluicing cabin floors.

No tempest with a name,
no buffeting blows, only water
remodeling.

                       *

At storm's end apples and oranges
and the same taste of fruit gone bad.



Marilyn Aschoff Mellor