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diane-woodward-dorff
diane-woodward-dorff
Diane Woodward Dorff was born loving poetry. With a B.A. in English / and an M.S. in Technical Communication, she set aside her dreams of / being a poet to make a living as a technical writer. She is back to / poetry.
I woke this morning from a dream of eating blueberries indigo streams as the fruit burst into juice and pulp filling my mouth with memories of summer warm and crushed and floating on my speechless tongue
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Mar 12, 2017
Mar 12, 2017 at 7:53 AM UTC
vernal equinox
“This is the forest primeval; but where are the hearts that beneath it Leaped like the roe….?” Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Evangeline Among the murmuring pines and the hemlocks, We stay in a log cabin built by men displaced by the Great Depression; Who would have said that it was not great at all. Losing their pride, then earning it back again. Here we stay, Provided a place by those men of the New Deal Those builders who poured out their labor, their time, Their thoughts, their words among themselves; And they, I think, must stay here, too.
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Mar 9, 2017
Mar 9, 2017 at 10:21 PM UTC
Itasca State Park
my soul is twisting judging me and begging you to release me from pain to say I am absolved I am understood I am esteemed still but I know that is not what I need I need me to say I am absolved that I do not need absolving I am simply me trying to do the best I can as are you and I know I am real and whole and good no matter what you think or I think you think we are all struggling to be right to be certified free from defect but we are not we are human and we are trying and I am trying and I am me and that is enough
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Mar 9, 2017
Mar 9, 2017 at 7:51 PM UTC
Peace and How to Travel There - to all who travel with me -
“I have seen the movement of the sinews of the sky, And the blood coursing in the veins of the moon.” – Allama Iqbal In September, the harvest moon, named by the Algonquin people. A gift to the earth; endowed for corn, beans, squash, sunflowers, and received in bright thankfulness. When, finally, the time arrives for an autumn moon to take its place between the earth and sun, swooping as close to earth as bright fireflies filling the sky. Lunar scheduling; a time to deliver scoops of light to the shadowy earth. Human faces staring upward at the inky sky. Stars dimmed by the golden moon that shines on prairies, sand, on city streets; glowing its song of moonlight; offering a nocturne to the silent ground. Each upturned face, waiting to be christened with moonlight; a conduit of heavenly fire that moves from face to face circling in contra dance around the rocky earth. And each up tilted face in Calgary and Cairo, Belarus and Brazil, rhymes with golden light. As the moon glow wanes above, it waxes here below; endowing our faces with moonlight, a celestial loan, leaving the moon with only orange and red, while September yellow clings to us on earth. The sound of light brushing our faces, settling into place, with sweetness of chamomile, fragrant with the end of summer. Whispers of the autumn equinox, and the earth keeping promises. Soon we must return the borrowed lightening, the buttery splash, to the orange-red moon. And we pay. Not with regret, but gladly. All we who have seen the hushing of the moon; we hold forever in the particles that make ourselves, the seeds of moonlight. Pieces of the moon.
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Mar 9, 2017
Mar 9, 2017 at 7:44 PM UTC
Pieces of the Moon
“I have seen the movement of the sinews of the sky, And the blood coursing in the veins of the moon.” – Allama Iqbal In September, the harvest moon, named by the Algonquin people. A gift to the earth; endowed for corn, beans, squash, sunflowers, and received in bright thankfulness. When, finally, the time arrives for an autumn moon to take its place between the earth and sun, swooping as close to earth as bright fireflies filling the sky. Lunar scheduling; a time to deliver scoops of light to the shadowy earth. Human faces staring upward at the inky sky. Stars dimmed by the golden moon that shines on prairies, sand, on city streets; glowing its song of moonlight; offering a nocturne to the silent ground. Each upturned face, waiting to be christened with moonlight; a conduit of heavenly fire that moves from face to face circling in contra dance around the rocky earth. And each up tilted face in Calgary and Cairo, Belarus and Brazil, rhymes with golden light. As the moon glow wanes above, it waxes here below; endowing our faces with moonlight, a celestial loan, leaving the moon with only orange and red, while September yellow clings to us on earth. The sound of light brushing our faces, settling into place, with sweetness of chamomile, fragrant with the end of summer. Whispers of the autumn equinox, and the earth keeping promises. Soon we must return the borrowed lightening, the buttery splash, to the orange-red moon. And we pay. Not with regret, but gladly. All we who have seen the hushing of the moon; we hold forever in the particles that make ourselves, the seeds of moonlight. Pieces of the moon.
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