Impatient Spring – a poem by Ken Gierke

Impatient Spring


Warm morning light eases the transition
from melting snow to winter lawn.
Four robins skip across the turf,
pausing to peck at both soil and snow,
ignoring juncos and wrens
that forage for dropped seeds
below a feeder monopolized
by cardinal, titmouse, and chickadee.

I step outside for the morning paper,
greeted by the call of another robin
high in the white oak that towers
over the yard.  Snow is still banked
beside the driveway, witness to shoveling
during last week’s introduction to February.
Beside it and below the oak lies bare lawn.
The robin calls to me, as if to say
snow may fall again, but we are here,
and there is no stopping spring.

Ken Gierke writes primarily in free verse and haiku. His poetry has been published or is forthcoming both in print and online in such places as Amethyst Review, As It Ought to Be Magazine, Ekphrastic Review, Poetry Breakfast, and Silver Birch Press. Glass Awash, his first collection of poetry, was published by Spartan Press in 2022. His website: https://rivrvlogr.com/

10 Comments

  1. Love these lines especially: “The robin calls to me, as if to say
    snow may fall again, but we are here,
    and there is no stopping spring.”

    Liked by 2 people

  2. This reminds me very much of how spring comes to where I live.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It’s always welcome here!

      Like

  3. Ron.'s avatar Ron. says:

    Congrats on the pub, Ken. I gotta start sending stuff out again, I guess. Fine work! What is this “bare lawn” of which thou speaketh?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Ron.. Bare lawn — maybe you’ll see it by May?

      Like

  4. This is such a delightful poem. I love it. 😊

    Like

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