Reanimated Lavender Granola Switchblade Nun rides again.

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

In The Silent Hour

in the silent hour
indigo of night sky
through branches of walnut and mulberry
full moon shines on
my dog as he wanders
while i stand hugging myself, waiting, watching
while i stand hugging myself, waiting, watching
my dog as he wanders
full moon shines on
through branches of walnut and mulberry
indigo of night sky
in the silent hour. 
______

for the Wednesday Muse--night sky.

There must surely be a name for this type of poem. Anyone know what it is?

8 comments:

  1. A palindrome, I believe. And ha! I comment three minutes after you post, that is how keen I am. LOL. This is full of beautiful imagery.

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  2. A palindrome, if I'm not mistaken, has to read the same backward or forward. In this poem, the lines are reversed but the individual words are not. So, still not sure.

    3 minutes! You are speedy, my friend.

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  3. Wow...palindrome!! I love the "indigo of night sky"....the night sky does have an affect on us all. Sweet....i love it!

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  4. Oh I love this. The indigo of night...that blue hour. And what a neat form. I can just picture Zacky wandering under the full moon.

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  5. 'The most commonly used Categories of palindrome are given here:

    Character by Character
    Name Palindrome
    Word Palindrome
    Number Palindrome
    Line-unit Palindrome
    Word-unit Palindrome'

    Yours must be a line-unit Palindrome.

    Gorgeous poem anyway.

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  6. Whatever form this is, it is one I can understand, a dirge that isn't quite a dirge because somehow it also celebrates. I've read your last three poems, including your lovely blues story, which reads more like a novel, compressed into a few living and breathing images--how the past can live and breathe is something only real poets know and transmit--but I like this one best, with its quality of peace and bone-deep acceptance. Your April 'farewell tour' has produced so many gems--and I know you will always somehow catch another star in your net. Toads has been graced with many bright lights in its course, but yours is the one that will always shine for me. Thank you Shay, for believing in your gift, through all the darkest times, and never letting that light go out.

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  7. Love it, Shay. It's damn hard to write a poem in his form with all the repetition without it becoming trite and annoying. I like the hugging yourself line repeated in the middle.

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Spirit, what do you wish to tell us?