Poem: Mayflower to Fall

close up of dry maple leaves on the ground
Photo by Anna Zhdanko on Pexels.com

As the sullen leaves begin to turn
my thoughts turn inward
like a deciduous tree’s essence.
This, the true end of the year,
is a time of reflection,
of lighting fires and long walks
where the hanging wood smoke evokes
tales of old ancestors.

Brutus is here from that long trail from Troy;
so too Hengist and Horsa of the Jutes,
more noble than they knew.
I leave aside the Conqueror, for his path
of destruction I can still sense in this old land.

Here too, in the reds, browns and golds
under my feet, lies the promise of spring,
the new beginnings laid down years before.
For from here sailed the Mayflower,
leaving behind a corrupted world.
I sense their desire for truth, to get
back to basics, the continuity stretching
back to the garden, where my clumsy feet
search out a route straight to spring.

But in the new land
where the Mayflower spilled its seed,
how is the fall this year
and what kind of spring will it be?

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Haiku: Childhood

two children standing beside green mailbox
Photo by Amber Faust on Pexels.com

The days were longer
The summers always warmer
Memories sweeter

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Poem: Rejection

close up photo of man wearing black suit jacket doing thumbs up gesture
Photo by Lukas on Pexels.com

Why should I care?
I’m only one among many lost
in the dross of mediocrity and favour.

Yes, I thought I was someone,
I thought I could contribute,
thought I might have a place.

But all this is wiped on a whim,
a cursory glance of a statistic,
a quick click of a mouse.

Without recourse to contact
the arrogant are justified
in the sharpest of suits.

How the unworthy rule
and their cohorts squirm
with cowardly gesture, though

a split second decision
can take an age to resolve – and
believe me – it’s never forgotten

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Haiku: Precipice

aerial photo of mountain surrounded by fog
Photo by icon0.com on Pexels.com

No one wants the truth
Make believe is far better
Fools stand on the edge

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Tanka: Ant Colony

abstract ants bark bee
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

This ant colony
There’s no individual
No concept of hope
Freedom is an abstraction
Death is the only way out

copyright Francis Barker 2019