Author: cfblack

  • Asheville

    water leaves muddy foot prints in the top most boughs of trees tomorrow tragedies will reveal themselves in debris fields of mountain streams splintered makeshift crucifixes festooned with corpses years of recovery and sunshine cannot resurrect 9-29-24

  • color of the moon

    the moon is not made of green cheese maybe brie, gouda, provolone or mild cheddar but green is not the color of the moon. 9-26-24

  • on any given Sunday

    looking for an edge both teams use pregame prayer circles with the God angle negated a Hail Mary pass is no longer a viable option you promise to tithe your winnings hoping angels juice over/under wagers 9-24-24

  • after mindgravy

    Outside the moon rolled up clouds revealed its round Buddha belly. I stood transfixed in the afterglow. Is this Zen I do not know I pat my belly in satisfaction. It is a good night to be alive. 9-20-2024

  • Blotto boy

    the prompt was ‘Drunken Scalawag’ He stumbles through midnight mist, bottle clasped in weathered fist, boots torn, shirt askew, a scalawag with nothing to lose. Eyes aglow like stars gone mad, laughs at dreams he never had, sings a song, sharp and sweet, the rhythm of his happy feet. Tavern calls, streets spin, wagers life…

  • a door with no window

    Poem written from the prompt, ‘Magic Door’ behind a windowless door secret worlds await twist of the knob a gentle push careful it may lock behind you dreams take flight fairies dance dragons soar phoenixes rise where time stands still magic is not always good give me a door with a window 9-9-24

  • a short poem about war

    wounded soldiers lie bleeding out in no man’s land neither side can retrieve them grown men crying for their mothers to come save them when will mothers demand an end to war 9-12-24

  • Indiana Winter Sundays on Greenbush Street

    (09/08 – 1950’s memory poems) Under a doily covered table with a lamp, two African violets, and a half-filled ashtray; among claw-footed legs lay an out-of-round coconut, its outer husk intact, a large yellow conch shell with pink inner lips, Florida souvenirs from my aunt. Grandad said hold it to your ear, listen to the…

  • Soul Train

    A friend from childhood asked me to write a memorial poem for the passing of his 92 year old father; I asked him for nine things that remind him of his father and incorporated them within the context of the poem (I have removed his father’s name from this posting). ‘Soul Train’ No one chooses…

  • (no title)

    Before our parents died and my brother bought their house an old flour sifter lay under the cabinet on a shelf next to a hand cranked egg beater Now they exist only in dreams of cake batter bowls waiting to be licked clean before momma demands I share 9-4-24