Wednesday, June 29, 2022

My Second Book of Poetry

 


On June 23, 2022 I self-published my second book of poetry.

This book continues in the same vein as my earlier one, Discoveries In The Dark, in which I wrote:  

Each one of us is born from the dark and returns to the dark.

I would suggest as well that we live our lives in the dark.  By this I mean that we, as strangers in this world, spend our time trying to understand what to make of everything.  Our life-spans are not very long for us to explore what life is and how to navigate it.

In Longing For The Light,  I continue to explore our condition of stumbling in the dark. We long for a lighted path.

Both books contain short poems, often accompanied by nature photographs that I have taken.

They are available as eBooks on Amazon and can be found by clicking on the links:  

Discoveries In The Dark; Longing For The Light.

Saturday, June 25, 2022

The Veery's Song

 

The Veery's 

      enchanted

           spiral call


Like musical

       notes in a

            waterfall.


Downward

      and downward

           until it's all


Lost in the soft,

       green echoes.


December 2016

(from the book Discoveries In The Dark by Doris Potter)

© Doris Potter



 

Saturday, June 18, 2022

Moths

 



The languid flight

in summer night

of a graceful moth.


Its patterned wings –

exquisite things –

soft like velvet cloth.


No need for flash

or dazzling hue –

subtle panache

bewitches too.


2019

(from the book Discoveries In The Dark by Doris Potter)

© Doris Potter




Saturday, June 11, 2022

Wild Bird


Wild bird – you thrash and throw

yourself against my walls.


What led you here, off course

and lost and finding no escape?


There ... held fast between my palms,

I turn and walk towards the light.


With open hands and heart ...

I give you back the sky.


1995 (from the book Discoveries In The Dark by Doris Potter)

© Doris Potter




Friday, June 10, 2022

The Incredible Hoya Plant

When my sister, Diane, sent me a recent photo of one of her Hoya cuttings, I felt that the story of this amazing plant needed to be shared.  Here is Diane’s account of the history of her plant.

“In the mid to late 1970s Doris’ friend Marjorie gave me her Hoya carnosa plant (a.k.a. Wax Plant) as she was moving to Seattle.  I remember her telling me that, from time to time, there will be a few pink bloom clusters.  Sure enough, it would bloom now and then over the following fifteen years or so.  It continued to grow well and by 1993 it was at least 3 feet tall.  We moved in January of that year to Ontario from Montreal and, not wanting the plant to die if it travelled in the moving van, we brought it with us in the back seat of our car.  It made the trip okay and has been in our dining room ever since.  This room doesn’t get any direct sunlight and the plant rarely blooms but it has continued to grow and is now over 6 feet tall.



However, I have cuttings in water that do bloom regularly!  I add no nutrients to the water, and I have found that once the roots form a tight ball, the plant will bloom, almost continually, in one area of the plant or another.  Recently, the plant in water that resides in our kitchen, had five blooms at one time!  It gets the morning sun which I assume helps it to flower.  This plant, started from a couple of cuttings from the original, is at least 10 years old.  And all it gets is sunshine and tap water!


Over the years I have given cuttings away and started new plants for myself.  The one on the table next to the lamp is in potting soil and is about 4 years old.  It gets filtered sunlight and has not yet produced a bloom.  The plant in the jug is solely in water and is about 2 or 3 years old.  It gets only ambient light and also has yet to bloom.




As I’ve had the plant for close to 45 years and as it must have been mature when I received it because it had bloomed for its previous owner, I suspect it is over 50 years old.  Hopefully, it will continue for a few more decades.”



By the way, the paintings of the tiger and the flamingo are originals by Diane, so not only does she have a green thumb, but she is a very talented artist too!






Saturday, June 4, 2022

Blue and Gold

 

The cerulean vase sits
bathed in soft light
from a nearby window –

Its gleaming beauty
wrought by skillful hands
with gentle touch.

Yet over time, fractures appear ...

And new hands come
to mend these cracks
with molten gold –
Kintsugi it's called.

Golden seams seal each jagged break,
and glint on azure curves.

Even that which is broken
can still be beautiful.


2020 

(from the book Discoveries In The Dark by Doris Potter)

© Doris Potter