What Lies Beneath

Today at dVerse Poetics Pub, we are having a joust of sorts. We are to choose a line (or more) from one of two poems (or both) chosen by the previous bartenders, Brian and Claudia. Here is the link: http://dversepoets.com/2015/02/26/pick-a-line-and-get-that-joust-started/ I chose a line from Claudia’s poem. it is in italics.

copyright kanzensakura

copyright kanzensakura

Branch blown by the wind –
fingers stick out from the snow
reaching out.
I threw out bread for the birds
On both  ends,
A sparrow perched,
their feathers fluffed with the cold
and bright eyes seeking
out the bits of bread closest
to their perch.
The full branch lay encased
under the snow
holding steady – an invisible bridge.
the sparrows chirp
and cock their heads
and converse about their plans.
later we will cross
tower bridge into the night”.
In the morning
I see no trace of their
tracks but the bits of bread are gone.

44 Comments (+add yours?)

  1. The Course of Our Seasons
    Feb 26, 2015 @ 22:43:59

    Love the tower bridge for the sparrows – a charming scene – we love to feed these little feathered creatures too- they give such joy

    Reply

  2. bmiller007 (@bmiller007)
    Feb 26, 2015 @ 22:46:50

    i fed the birds today as well…and a squirrel that was doing a funny dance in the snow looking for food..he kept pushing his head down in the snow and jerking back up …i chuckled a bit but felt bad and brought him a treat…cool reimaging of that branch as the bridge for them..

    Reply

    • kanzensakura
      Feb 26, 2015 @ 22:52:43

      It is fun to feed the critters and a kindness as well. One of my rowdy squirrels had his butt up in the air as he kept digging deeper and deeper into the snow. His friend came along, barked at him and began to eat bread off the snow. The other squirrel popped up like…oh! duh!

      Reply

  3. Desmond, Anthony (@iamEPanthony)
    Feb 26, 2015 @ 23:19:10

    I love feeding critters; birds, cats, wild rabbits (and skunks possibly) get treats from me… A certain cat always comes by my house… every now and then it get’s lucky and finds a bowl of tuna. heheh

    Reply

  4. MarinaSofia
    Feb 27, 2015 @ 00:14:47

    Such a charminly observed, tender poem. I like the imagined conversation -they really do chirrup in a very Cockney manner, the sparrows, don’t they?

    Reply

  5. Björn Rudberg (brudberg)
    Feb 27, 2015 @ 00:50:08

    Oh I’m sure they would have such a conversation.. A little bread goes a long way to get through these hard days, and I’m glad it gives them some time to have fun also.

    Reply

  6. Snakypoet (Rosemary Nissen-Wade)
    Feb 27, 2015 @ 02:41:16

    Such a happy feeling you generate with this!

    Reply

  7. claudia
    Feb 27, 2015 @ 03:15:17

    i love listening to the sparrows when they converse about their plans… smiles… wondering if they’re talking about how flying feels… would love to know ya know… would be like crossing a bridge as well probably…

    Reply

  8. georgeplace2013
    Feb 27, 2015 @ 10:20:40

    We feed the birds from a lovely red “barn” hanging from the wisteria. However they end up eating mostly from the ground cause the deer come at night and hit the feeder with their head to spill the seed on the ground. At least they all get to eat this snowy winter.

    Reply

  9. Grace
    Feb 27, 2015 @ 13:14:36

    Such a lovely scene ~ We don’t see that many birds here in our backyard, just the nosy squirrels ~ I can imagine them having that conversation 🙂

    Reply

  10. Bryan Ens
    Feb 27, 2015 @ 22:45:32

    you paint a lovely scene here, although I was wondering when I saw the picture…I immediately conjured images of some monster lurking beneath the snow, with just its skeletal hands above the surface. 🙂

    Reply

  11. Sabio Lantz
    Feb 28, 2015 @ 05:53:32

    Simple and rich. Love the pic, actually. And how the story matches perfectly.
    I really enjoy poetry that I don’t walk away from without understanding.
    Nicely done

    Reply

    • kanzensakura
      Feb 28, 2015 @ 10:01:25

      Thank you both counts. I love this pic as well and I think I have about 3 more poems for it. My own private prompt! Like you, I don’t always care for twisty turny poems that leave me shaking my head. I’m a forthright person and like that in my literature. Although I can pick through them and pull out a bunch of meanings, I’d rather it just speak to me. Thank you again

      Reply

  12. joannesisco
    Feb 28, 2015 @ 08:07:40

    I love the line – holding steady, an invisible bridge 🙂

    Reply

  13. Gay Reiser Cannon
    Feb 28, 2015 @ 14:15:22

    The images are vivid, and the entire thing works as a metaphor for the way we bridge across the weather in winter. We had four inches of snow, and you’d think it was Boston in Dallas. I spent 5 hours getting back and forth to the cancer center with my friend yesterday because these people in Dallas have no clue how to navigate in ice and snow, and we have no road equipment for it. Yet there were people getting out of cars giving other folks a helping push or lift if they got stuck all over the place. Winter does bring out the good samaritans.

    Reply

  14. mishunderstood
    Feb 28, 2015 @ 19:17:07

    This is so lovely. I like the straightforwardness of your poem. Today we lined up peanuts on our fence for the squirrels. It was fun to watch them try to dodge the deep snow to get them. 🙂

    Reply

  15. 7128788elf
    Mar 01, 2015 @ 15:30:20

    Hi Kanzen, I am enjoying your blog a lot, I really loved the two poems that you wrote using line from someone else’ s poem, the one about the Samurai, kept me interested until the last word; wonderful. Thanks for following and liking my blog, best wishes and blessing, Charles.

    Reply

  16. wholeproduction
    Mar 01, 2015 @ 22:53:01

    Nicely penned, I really like the ending 🙂

    Reply

  17. Snow's Fissures and Fractures
    Mar 02, 2015 @ 08:09:04

    This is so lovely, especially the last few lines.
    “In the morning
    I see no trace of their
    tracks but the bits of bread are gone.”
    We are just casual observers of what we are aloud to see.

    Reply

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