Friday, July 22, 2011

Prairie Molecules

I danced in the Atlantic today

Barefoot, the sand beneath my feet

The cold water rushing in waves,

Lapping the skin of my calves.

The thought occurs to me

That the waters that swirl about my feet

Were once the dew that evaporated

From the ocean of prairie far away.

And the molecules traveled eastward through the air

Fell as rain over this ocean

Mingling with the salt waters,

But still, retaining their original form

That was born in the morning dews

Of my prairie home.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Small Grain, Infinite Peace


 

I walk amidst the bearded barley
brushing the crested heads with my hands
I wade into the living sea of gold
and upon laying down,

gaze up at the blue sky
painted with wandering cirrus clouds
framed out by bowing, amber bearded heads
nodding in wondrous acknowledgement

of my peace.


 

Catherine Schmidt

Monday, April 25, 2011

R. Whalen Napping

West Hall is filled with geriatrics;

It seems the people that fill these offices,

Not one is under the age of fifty.

Older women dressed in sweaters and slacks

With Black Hills Gold earrings

And oversized gaudy necklaces

Dyed, perfectly styled hair.

Their desks strewn with pictures

Of children, and grandchildren

And comedic cats.

There is an office door which is almost always closed.

R. Whalen states the plaque.

The door when open, reveals an ancient man

In his eighties

His balding, liver spotted head

Resting on his chest in an afternoon nap.

Wearing a dignified navy blue sweater vest

Looking the part of the retired professor.

I wonder if he passed away, in his sleep

In that hot cramped office, would people notice

His leaving,

Or think he was merely napping?


 

Catherine Schmidt

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Flea Market Discovery

The dust is tickling my nose

As we rifle through the stacks

Of our youth, sorted by genre

And labeled with rummage sale stickers

Two dollars for my memory

Of dancing in the living room with Lizzy

To Baby Elephant Walk or

Fifteen for your late night excursions

Into the Strawberry Fields

Our memories are in these piles

Every pop, crack and needle slide

We gather them up,

Giggling at our discoveries

And drive away with our find

Dust-covered memories

For only $20.95.


 

Catherine Schmidt

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Dawn in Winter


 

Skeletal branches are

Softened and shaded

By sparkling hoar frost

In the embrace of morning.


 

Stars trace impossible

Geometric patterns

Lacework against

The blue-black sky.


 

Venus is dancing,

Skipping and chasing

The moon across the sky

In flirtatious appreciation.


 

Catherine Schmidt


 


 


 


 

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Melted

She had a moment of clairvoyance,

The second before, and she knew

This could be the beginning of her new life.

He reached for her, drew her in,

Circling one strong arm firmly about her waist.

She felt small, petite, there, in that hold.

He slid his right hand up along her neck,

Cupping her face, holding her

As if she was delicate crystal, precious.

Their breathing synchronized,

And he tilted her face up to his.

His lips touched hers, and flitted away,

Then raced towards her again.

Her breath became his,

And his breath was hers.

She was warm, and flushed,

And in fact, she was melted.

Catherine Schmidt


 


 

Friday, February 25, 2011

Skinlessness

Somewhere in between
the weaving of cotton-threaded sheets,
and the matched naked bodies
lying spooned to each other.
In the bliss that follows, 
the breathlessness, the exhilaration,
the praising of something
akin to a higher power
but chemically rooted in the brain.
The mingling of scents, for tomorrow,
his redolence will linger in her hair,
and he will smell her fragrance on his hands.
On the premise of loneliness,
of affection, of wanting,
They will give and taste of each other.
All in the name of oneness,
the search for skinlessness,
in between cotton-threaded sheets.

Catherine Schmidt

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Torrential Down Pour


 

In the gentle flush of the evening light

There comes a calming clamor

That speaks of the ages

Of the circles intertwined

As the weaver mingling fibers

Lovingly over and under each other

The din sings, and swells to a magnificent aria

Hailing and tapping, calling to the night

Drumming out a rhythm

Thousands of joyous hands clapping

And weary feet dancing

I stand at the screen door in wonder

The rain keeps coming down

Laughing and singing, clapping

As it meets the flagging leaves

Of the India green corn.


 

Catherine Schmidt

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Sleep

    In her slow breaths I see

The Tasmanian devil tamed

The whirlwind roped by its tail

Her continuous movement,

While fluid and confident, is halted.

    She would shudder to know

I am watching, memorizing,

Her lashes low, crystalline eyes veiled

The lines of her nose, jaw line and cheeks.

In uncommon silence, she reposes.

No furrowed brows, only peace.

She is beautiful when she sleeps.


 

Catherine Schmidt


 


 


 

.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Winter Thaw

In shivering delight, arriving at the door

Shrouded in layers of wool and fleece

Greeted by his fiery presence

His hands know what hides beneath this stratum

With agonizing strength he peels the layers away

For I am an onion, weeping at my body's joy

As he cuts away to my center.

Moving together effortlessly,

The melting snow carving channels into itself

His silken bandana wound about my wrists

His willing prisoner, and bound to him

He is melting the ice walls within me

As he takes what he can;

I give all I have, knowing that when he leaves

The hoarfrost will return to my heart.

Catherine Schmidt

Monday, January 3, 2011

Prairie Cemetery

If there be memories here,

Echoes of the past long ago silenced;

then they exist in the quiet whispers

of the rustling cottonwood leaves.


 

If there be a thought that lingers on,

a moment's ingenuity still considered;

then it is imbedded in the stems

of the golden rockets and pasque flowers here.


 

This gentle square of prairie, rough unbroken sod,

bears witness to a past which most have forgotten.

A lonely lilac guards a leaning stone,

drawing its branches in a protective embrace.

Root bound flowers encircle falling stones,

remnants of grief and a harder time.


 

If there be memories or thoughts here,

visions and ingenuity that linger on.

They are embedded in the depths

of my hardened country soul.

I have not forgotten.


 

Catherine Schmidt


 

Followers