Poem: Murmur

black and green humming bird perched on wood branch
Photo by Flickr on Pexels.com

There’s not a breath of wind,
the dark silhouettes of starlings
bedeck the listless droop of the willow.
This gathering for the fall
is nature’s soul reclaiming its own,
whilst we, confident in our ignorance,
our sovereign separation from the core,
have the gall to wonder at murmurations
as if seen for the first time –
as if we play no part in it.
Medieval minds had more wisdom than this;
they looked at the world for what it was,
in balance and in tune, sowing and reaping,
whilst we know only how to reap
in anticipation of no tomorrow,
sowing the seed of our own demise.
How the starlings will murmur.

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Tanka: Intervention

star trail photography
Photo by Killian Eon on Pexels.com

I knock on the door
No one will ever answer
Seek intervention
but silence reigns in the sky
Connivance rules the dark world

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Tanka: The Last Trump

winged human statue
Photo by Szabolcs Tóth on Pexels.com

Is it irony
or maybe co-incidence
Signs say otherwise
The Last Trump ready to blow
Romulus screams from the grave

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Tanka: Sacrifice

army burial cemetery cross
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

On a day like this
you lay down your life for me
Our long betrayal
It’s brother against brother
True freedom cannot be bought

copyright Francis Barker 2019

 

Haiku: Little Homes

beige and green house
Photo by Jeffrey Czum on Pexels.com

From our little homes
we will lead our little lives
The big picture’s lost

copyright Francis Barker 2019