*expired*
napowrimo – 6 april 2007
© 2007 Christine Klocek-Lim
*expired*
napowrimo – 6 april 2007
© 2007 Christine Klocek-Lim
*expired*
napowrimo – 5 april 2007
© 2007 Christine Klocek-Lim
*expired*
napowrimo – 4 april 2007
© 2007 Christine Klocek-Lim
*expired*
napowrimo – 3 april 2007
© 2007 Christine Klocek-Lim
*expired*
napowrimo – 2 april 2007
© 2007 Christine Klocek-Lim
*expired*
napowrimo – 1 april 2007
© 2007 Christine Klocek-Lim
Brutally, the robin
bites the ground, digs
at the sharp grass with stubborn
instinct. The worms are dead
in the frailty of winter. Sorrow
blossoms easily, like feathers
on snow. I have no memory
of your hands. Only the difficult
tilt of your head (your jaw as stubborn
as a bird’s beak) flutters to the surface
of my thoughts. It is January, inside this house.
I am steady until the robin ends his futile movements
and flies into the woods, away from my clouded window.
In the distance, even the specks of his wings vanish
though my yard clutches a few stray feathers;
brown against the indecent white of snow.
© 2007 Christine Klocek-Lim
Poem Spark Jan. 8-15 – Inspired by . . .
First line from Paula Bohince’s poem titled, “Brutally, the Robin”

This time the wooded
mountain gave up words. Wild,
unbridled verbs thickened the air.
Nouns feathered the ground. It was clear
the leaves were distressed, by the harshness,
the unveiling, as if secrets and belief
were meant to hide forever. No one knows
how the trees’ bark peeled, how to distinguish
the truth among so many naked trunks. Versions
differ. Too many adjectives were lost. What is
disaster, anyway? Words can only describe sorrow.
© 2006 Christine Klocek-Lim
Inspired by Jack Gilbert’s poem.