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category archive listing Category Archives: Poems

On a Winter’s Day

The snow is falling, covering the ground,
grass, shrubs and trees painted white all around.
Children laugh with glee as they build a snowman,
the girls insisting it’s a snow-woman named Anne.

My wife and I decide on a wonderland stroll,
the beauty of nature’s winter to extol.
On go bulky coats, gloves, furry hats and tall boots,
we playfully call “ top of the line winter suits”.

We find the blue lake in cold frozen splendor,
skaters gracefully skim by in pairs of each gender.
Looming beyond, to a white mountain we shift our gaze
and see skiers whizz along in a freshly powdered maze.

Down the snow covered path through dense woods we go,
and scatter brazil nuts from home to hungry animals bestow.
We sit down on a frosty log and watch with pleasure,
as a pair of rabbits emerge and eat their measure.

Lesson From a Blizzard

A blizzard had come to Jack and Jane’s town,
the snow not just falling but blitzing down!
Peering out a window, finding visibility near zero,
deciding no way would they try to be a hero,
they glanced at each other with their best mock frown.

So with Jack on the land phone, Jane on the cell,
while watching weather the exact opposite of that of hell,
both called their boss with something delightful to say,
“I’m snowed under, can’t make it in to work today”,
as already sub-freezing temperatures dipped and fell.

Giving themselves the day off was really a perverse pleasure,
before the recording both heard served to lessen the measure.
Jack and Jane’s respective offices had been closed,
until the severe winter storm had been weather deposed.
“Oh well”, said Jack, “we still get a day or more of leisure”.

Almost Never the Best Answer

War is almost never the best answer,
yet nations attack nations as if a cancer.
Due largely to differences in way of life,
the loser’s land may be carved up as if by a knife,
attempts made to rearrange their thoughts of mind,
twisting them ’til with the victor’s way they align.
And legalized killing is certainly nothing pretty,
especially that of innocent civilians in any land’s city.
Is it really so difficult for any government heads,
to sit down at a table where common sense spreads
and peacefuly negotiate?. . .Surely world leaders are able
to find war-less solutions that leave all countries stable.
While this way of thinking may be but a dream,
if every government practiced it, oh how supreme!
No one ever chose the country in which they’d be born,
but their way of life is their own, and war worthy of scorn. 
Of course, if any country finds its been hostilely invaded,
it’s not even a choice to become war persuaded.
The only option left then is to defend citizens and nation,
and warring grows to necessity in such a situation.
Otherwise, the question of war is one never required,
and governments should settle differences without one bullet fired.
                  

A Trashy Tale

Now please, dear readers, please don’t be alarmed,
and hopefully not too disappointed if that’s your take.
The reputation of any persons won’t here be harmed,
nor any occurances or events will this story partake,
and you’ll not be reading about porn for goodness sake.
But you’ll learn about trash, more than you wanted to know,
and if you prefer the term “garbage”, it’s still apropos.

In the United States at least, trash is a growing affliction,
each of us, at home and at work, creating 4.5 pounds a day
of a commodity we’d as soon not have, without contradiction.
A 70 year old has generated 50 tons of trash, says one survey,
as much as 10 African bull elephants together would weigh.
And, although recycling trash in the US has steadily grown,
two-thirds still wind up in a landfill or incinerator it’s known.

Bailout of The Bank of Westerville, 1931

In the United States, in the year 1929, the Great Depression
wrought severe financial crisis and hardship throughout the land.
Even those previously rich awakened to meet monetary repression
and ate from soup lines, while others, too proud in them to stand,
leapt from a skyscraper, their mind’s last decision and command.

In the state of Ohio, the then tiny farming town of Westerville
is today one of the largest suburbs of Columbus, Ohio’s capitol city.
Life there continued normally in 1929, escaping the Depression, until
in late November, 1931, it finally hit the town and it wasn’t pretty,
but Westerville’s town fathers in no way simply wallowed in pity.

Beset with a multitude of problems, their local bank topped the list,
as The Bank of Westerville had run drastically short of cash
and Ohio’s banking superintendent shut it down with an iron fist,
becoming one of  5,000 US banks failing from the Depression’s bash.
But the town of 2,900 needed a bank, if it was to survive the crash.

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