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S M Chen Dec 2016
A tree, like man, is born to toil,
As leafage falls, lies for a time
In dormancy, then makes the climb
To start a life, through crust of soil.

If nature's kind (at least is fair),
The sapling usually will thrive;
Takes what it needs to stay alive
From earth and water, sun and air.

Through countless seasons, start to end,
The searing heat and bitter cold,
The wind and blight that make it old,
And topple many a fellow friend;

Despite the years of overuse,
Put upon by man and beast,
The tree complains not in the least,
Nor asks for respite from abuse.

Day by day, it seems to know
The One who made it, made us all;
So, when it feels the final call
To leave its place in earth and go,

It yields itself for greater good.
In dying, gives itself to man,
Providing, in what ways it can,
Warmth and shelter with its wood.

                            *

Sage advice is sometimes free.
The message of this simple verse
Is:  we could do a little worse
Than take a lesson from the tree.
S M Chen Dec 2016
A Fibonacci poem, in which the # of syllables per line = the sum of the # of syllables in the 2 preceding lines.

-----

Who

would

have thought

that one man

would be inspired to

come up with a numerical

sequence that depicts so many things found in nature

such as leaf arrangement in plants, pattern of florets of a flower, bracts of
pinecones,

spirals of seashells and whorls of galaxies and hurricanes?  This Golden Ratio, symbol for which is ‘phi,’ one point six one eight, is a

fundamental characteristic of the universe.  Can one, by searching, find the divine?  The question vexed Job, but Fibonacci, if he did not, may have come close, for has it not been said that nature is God’s second book?
S M Chen Dec 2016
Under an azure, cloud-streaked sky,
Illumined by the sun,
Rooted in the fertile earth
It stands, the only one.

All the others have gone to seed.
Soon it itself will die.
But one last task remains for it;
Its kind must multiply.

So to the wind it casts its seeds,
Each with its parachute,
To take it where the breeze will blow
And there begin to root.

The departing seeds speak to me
Of what all things must face.
All are born and all must die; for
All there’s a time and place.

But in the meantime, I can feel
The ecstasy of sight.
What nature has provided us
Can make for our delight.

To the flying seeds I say, “May
You find a place that’s soft,
And may you be laid gently by
That which bore you aloft.”

To the plant which cast its seeds, I
Say, ‘Now your work is done.
You can join your fellow plants;
Of tasks left there is none.’

I thank the sun, I thank the sky.
I’m grateful to be there.
But most of all I thank the One
Who gave this silent prayer.
On seeing a dandelion go to seed, sending seedlings into the air to be carried by the wind
S M Chen Dec 2016
thoughts on seeing a veiled woman sitting in a shop in a town in Afghanistan, 1960s


What is it lies behind the eyes?
What could it be she’s thinking of?
Might it be children?  Perhaps love?
Or maybe truth, and maybe lies.

What hopes and dreams within her lie?
What music in her may be found?
In her did they find fertile ground
Or did they go there just to die?

Her look takes in so many things.
What is it that she’s searching for?
Perhaps (or not) she seeks for more
Or is content with what life brings.

What thoughts run through the mind of her –
This woman from an ancient land?
This harsh forbidding land of sand
Some have tried but none could conquer.

It may be that she’s past her prime;
I cannot guess her age in years.
She’s lived a life of fear and tears;
They make one old before one’s time.

The veil enshrouds identity,
But those who hide behind a veil
Hide but awhile, to no avail;
Time grinds to dust what some might see.

                                  *

She gazes out, but I gaze in
Beyond the veil, the face, the eyes.
It comes to me as no surprise
(And that is why I sympathize):
I find a place where I have been.

— The End —