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roslyn-nelson
roslyn-nelson
American Roslyn Nelson lives near Lake Superior in a small Wisconsin town where she is renovating a 100+ year old storefront for her graphic and book design activities (littlebigbay.com) and for life-in-general. / Mellen is at the foothills of the Penokee Range. Protection of this pristine watershed has been a recent focus in her life. A proposed open pit taconite mine threatened to gut streams and forests; destroy priceless, clean water; and pollute air, water and land. (Activists stopped it. Hooray!) / Ros is a graphic designer, artist, and poet. Little Big Bay specializes in creation of print-on-demand books. / “Writing poetry is mysterious work -- a breath-hold dive into awareness. Sometimes I begin feeling inspired. Other times, I just start. Inspiration is a bonus, but not a necessity. More and more often, I just take a deep breath and jump.” / "Raving About Summer ~ Fussing About Winter" and "Snow on Fire" are available at Amazon.com.
Will the bees coax the world to bloom? Pink-blue faint skies rub energetically at the edge of the landscape, aching to mate with a bush of feathery green buds. Too soon. Still March. Try again later. The road is promising though with mailbox tongues hanging open, also gasping for the flowering and swallowing the letter that commands current residents to Leap! To be Free! to smell the roses hidden so discreetly in the future. We are abuzz with what is Almost Here. Spring.
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Apr 18, 2016
Apr 18, 2016 at 3:50 PM UTC
Getting Warmer
Solstice is near and an owl
 sees everything that moves.
 The deer graze so slowly 
through the deep snow. Coming in my direction.
 I do not breathe. A giant bird flies the path 
 of a red and white arrow 
and crosses the road. We are thinking of the 
twenty children tonight.
 A cradle hangs above the trees,
 a milky, white, crescent moon
 moist with clouds. I know what I see and I see
 the unrocked moon 
 which I cannot reach 
to comfort.
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Dec 25, 2012
Dec 25, 2012 at 1:18 PM UTC
Twenty
When the pit is done, and abandoned the people will no longer think clearly because their grief will have become greater than any other sensibility. They will gather rusted fragments of metallic debris and haul them to the edge of the pit. Without ceremony, prayer or drum the outdoor grills, cell phones and cars tumble to the lowest ledges, some resting in shallow water. Then the people will wait, to see if these bits will serve as seeds and grow back the watershed, the mountain’s spine, eagle, bear, healing plant and water. It is very quiet here, by the pit where they wait.
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Jun 14, 2012
Jun 14, 2012 at 10:25 AM UTC
Open Pit Mine
Today I am so brave. I will go out and meet the earth, follow the warm pattern of light across the white forest floor, careful not to step on shadows that criss-cross the back of mother spring. What is ever green is breathing ever tenderly, lifting and falling. And the shadows breathe too. I have seen a single tall plant sway like this, independent of wind, waved as if someone were hiding in the grasses whose only job was to announce the location of one splendid, milky green stem. Soon there will be a roar. Birch trees will top themselves in green explosions. The dense mass of summer wind will arrive in the clearing with the power of a million animated leaves behind it. Stars will stop staring, find their voices, and arrange themselves into Constellation Summer. Everyone can feel it coming. Today you turn to the window and wonder what has caught your eye. It is the breath of spring. The people in their city beds and the the bears in their dens moan in their sleep because of it.
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Mar 30, 2012
Mar 30, 2012 at 10:49 AM UTC
Thaw
Out the window at the top of a ridge walk three sun brightened deer, deer that live also in the upside down globe of my eyes, busy righting everything so as not to worry me and have my feet in the clouds. Too late for that correction. My delight is with blue sky where the tree tops search for food and squint white clouds in color-burning-out light hover in brilliance. It is not even spring but the secret is out too and the snow that falls now is from the branches.
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Feb 20, 2012
Feb 20, 2012 at 11:13 AM UTC
Early Spring
We hoped for the melt but it was too sudden. The forest yielding its cover of snow took us by surprise and we were unwilling voyeurs of exposed, fallen limbs and defenseless patches of wet earth. Like picking up a magazine and finding that someone had filled out the quiz, “How **** are you?” And you know that person and you can never tell them that you also know their score. So we hoped again, this time for spring to hurry, to rush in with leaves and cover it all back up again, to ease our discomfort. Nightfall offered a softer view. One lamp in the front room spilled generous pools of light outside which for some hours dressed the bare earth and trees and let the forest appear hushed and secure the way it was before. But the deer, beyond the light pick their way on muddy ground. They search for footing with cautious, slender legs and each step is courage so of course, they will find spring even in the dark, step by step.
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Jan 30, 2012
Jan 30, 2012 at 10:20 AM UTC
How **** are you?
He was a cat everyone loved. A retriever who loved to be vacuumed and held like an infant child. Before he died, his brother curled up close and groomed him, even with no response. Still warm and soft, we buried him with a bowl and some fresh grass, something to throw up in the next life. Such a little grave, dug that morning. It did not seem right to dig a grave for a living thing. Now the light is long and gold and stretches, cat-like, across the dew damp street and grass. It matches the changing maples. Wind blows. Birds land. Inside the house is stillness.    Everywhere I touch old places, the flat white bedspread. No, it does not answer. The room where we held you as you died. The pillow you slept on for those difficult last days. The colored towel left next to it.  Is that dark shape my beloved friend? No. It is nothing. Nothing is everywhere in this house today. Nothing is curled up on the chair. Nothing meows to be taken outside. Nothing wants breakfast. Nothing is my dear small friend.   In the back yard, I pick two apples from the tree. The branch lifts without the weight. One apple on your grave. A silly gift. Cats don't eat apples. One thrown hard across the street, too far for you to chase.
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Jan 29, 2012
Jan 29, 2012 at 10:28 PM UTC
When the brown cat died