Poems

You've heard the one about the tortoise and the hare?
But surely not from the perspective of the rabbit,
the loser who, most unequivocally, was there
and had the vaunted prize in sight but failed to grab it.

Much had been said about the moral of this tale.
Praise piled and heaped upon the slow and steady turtle,
though most acknowledge that the race was more a fail
than a defeat for him who couldn’t be more fertile.

But what if all of that turned out to be a lie?
That tortoise hadn’t even gotten past the middle,
while the old rabbit lapped the distance, watch him fly,
yet still declared a total loser, what a riddle?

The hidden meaning of this ageless allegory?
Defining winning is how one controls the story.


Author notes: Image from author prompt to gemini

Uncommon wisdom notwithstanding,
it being something of a bind,
I would much rather be demanding -
and here I think we're of a mind -
our unconditional surrender.

Abandon hope, however slender,
of me and I as things apart,
fall to the dictates of the heart,
aglow in love's unchallenged glory.

But wisdom being what it is,
it never fails to rile, to tease,
reminding us: that's half the story,
that, yes, indeed, the story's half...

and oftentimes, that's not enough.


Author notes: image generated by author prompt to Gemini

Is there a windmill I can charge nearby?
Preferably, the old, the wooden kind,
and one whose blades are not set up too high -
I find the new ones that are so designed
as to avoid a knight's most fervent charge,
his lance a useless toothpick in the wind,
too scary, too forbidding, and too large,
and leaving me embarrassed and chagrined
at having failed to even make a dent.
What say you, Sancho, is there such a beast?
A target where our fury's better spent,
or less absurd and futile at the least?
You're silent. Oh, you haven't an idea?
No worries. Let me ask dear Dulcinea.


Author notes: image generated by author prompt to Gemini

Many a traveler
seeks to unravel her
mysteries, secrets, and lore.

Spends pretty pennies on
questioning denizens,
seeking to live evermore,

to find El Dorado.
Would that they rather
found a more fruitful pursuit.

Their queries unbidden,
so it remains hidden,
whether on horseback or foot.

They botch and they bungle,
get lost in the jungle,
all the while thinking they're close,

when by any good measure,
if searching for treasure,
it's right in front of your nose.


Author notes: image generated by author prompt to Gemini

Beyond the borders of forever,
out where not always and in part
join caveats, however clever,
against the fragile human heart,
that one, weak, vulnerable kingdom
which fights its battles, seems to win them,
only to find that all is lost
because it cannot bear the cost
of winning. She attempts to draft her
terms of surrender as a win.
Most unoriginal, her sin.
No, there won't be an ever after,
and no forever. Only now…

Surrendering, she makes a vow.


Author notes: image generated by author prompt to ChatGPT

I start with a To Whom It May Concern
and end it with the requisite Sincerely.
The body - took me long enough to learn -
lays out the subject matter, and as clearly

as possible, still potent, but concise,
with paragraphs that do not tend to linger,
to make it plain what's offered is advice,
not an attempt to blame or point a finger.

So often, though, I find I'm misconstrued,
interpreted in ways I've not intended,
or worse yet, told to screw myself, get sued,
and otherwise drop dead. I'm not offended

because, you see, I've been there. I know better.
And now, pay up: it's a collection letter.

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Hope this one put a smile on your face today


Author notes: image from Shutterstock