Saturday, February 23, 2013

The Meadows


THE MEADOWS

The cool wine cellar, furnished with your sighs,
Shall leave us drunk and dreaming
In the summerhouse at night.
After our kisses, our loving hearts beaming,
Into the gold-tinted meadows, alight
With daisies, grass and fireflies
We shall go, hand in hand,
Among the radiant and grand
Warm, scented, southern gales.

We shall rove like poets on the dales,
And refraining from all thought,
We shall glide among the rose-colored vales,
On the boundless fields by the rising ocean,
Immersed in naught
But love and emotion.

~ John Lars Zwerenz

Friday, February 22, 2013

I SHALL CALL FOR YOU, MY LOVE (From A New Book of American Poetry By John Lars Zwerenz)


I SHALL CALL FOR YOU, MY LOVE

Free from all cares
I pace upon the grass,
In summery airs,
Where soft breezes pass.
Scented breezes, of merriment and thyme
Taste fresh like matins’ dew,
Or the tangy juice of a dark green lime.
I am one with the marigolds, the willows, and the yew.
All steams flow for the sake of happiness.
The wind stirs the oaks and the wavering cypress.
(I love the ivory moon
When it’s full at the chime of noon.)
Near in the distance, a cathedral’s spire
Scrapes the gray clouds,
As I retire
In a farmhouse, clothed in a pea coat,
A woolly cloak of raven shrouds.
I think I’ll walk to the misty, blue harbor
And sail my little boat
Over the lake, to the sunlit arbor,
To greet more furrows and fields at play.
And when I find the end of day
I shall call for you, my love, my lady fair,
And we shall wander at night
In the hazy, summer air
Purely for delight,
Through the little garden there.

~ John Lars Zwerenz




visionarywanderings.com










A SONG FOR SAINT THERESE - John Zwerenz

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

RAIN (From A Lady Fair & Other Poems, written by John Lars Zwerenz, to be released worldwide this summer of 2013.)


RAIN

The lamppost, tristful,
Somnolent and wistful,
Receives the misty rain,
Which kisses every bough with tears,
As it has done now for years,
Under the long, gray curtain
Of billowing, heavy skies.
Such tears
Are certain.
For the gaze of my eyes,
Sadly and full of pain,
Wanders madly like a breeze,
Wayward and winding,
Beneath the wet
Silhouette
Of linden trees.

And yet,
With nothing apparently binding,
I call to mind my reveries
To render some portion of the day
To the realm of joy,
As I would do as a boy,
Dreaming of light in spite of my sorrow,
Hoping for a bright, golden tomorrow,
Lost in a bed of amber hay.

~ John Lars Zwerenz

visionarywanderings.com







LONDON, 1969


LONDON, 1969

Smoking a cigarette on Abbey Road,
As a gorgeous blond goes walking by,
She is the apple of my dreamy eye,
Passing by a wall of brick and brown.
The sunlight permeates the town.

The morning after,
In our college abode,
There are ashtrays full,
Situated next to the revolving record
Which spins on the stereo.
The summer's golden light
Comes in through the window,
Shining bright.

Felicia, Angela, Laura, Brian and John
Sleep after the party,
As the music plays on:
Led Zeppelin, side one;
The glistening, gleaming sun
Finds my beauty
On the sofa, on the leather divan.

I shall kiss her lips
To waken her
In time for class.
From the good, English air
I take splendid, long sips
As Laura leaves for the academic grass.

We awake one and all, thinking of the past,
As down the road four musicians record their last.
Laura must you be so pretty?
I'll smoke another fag.
All classes are a drag.
I think I'll take a walk through the city.

In the summer there are various hues and tones.
Motor cars are parked by the brownstones.
The chords of I Want You stir the green leaves.
Two girls are smoking cannabis
Hiding in the shade,
Beneath wide, Victorian eaves.
And the promises that they made
Fly into the clear, blue sky.

A taxi passes by.

Off to the University;
I shall take Laura's hand in mine.
Prior to our studies we shall buy some ale and wine.
Life is short, you see?-

After lectures on Shakespeare,
Hugo and Schopenhauer,
We pass the heat of the hour
With the sweet taste of Port and beer.

Golden Slumbers pour forth from a building nearby;
Laura wants an autograph.
I gaze up at the sky,
And I begin to laugh.

Two black limousines arrive.
Four men enter from a gated, white enclosure.
They hide from exposure.
They are finished too.
Although their careers still thrive.
Laura wants to marry two.

We return to the cozy, spacious, old flat,
Where Brian sleeps on the floor,
Upon a Persian mat.
Outside it begins to rain,
Throwing silver at our windowpane.
Laura, my love,
We shall meet once more.

~ John Lars Zwerenz

visionarywanderings.com








Sunday, February 17, 2013

WINES


WINES

The brisk, wintry gales
Glide sonorously
With the scent of holly
Over frozen dales.

In my lover’s dark eyes
There sighs a symphony
Beneath the cloudy, soporific skies.

We walk as pilgrims
As the gale departs
In the darkness of the moonlight,
On the meadows of the night,
As our felicity brims
In the carafe of our hearts,
With delicious wines of white.


 ~ John Lars Zwerenz

My Politics (Excerpt From a new book of American poetry to be released this summer of 2013.)


MY POLITICS

I walk in my sailor’s coat,
Upon a cemetery mound,
Sober and sound,
Acutely aware of my imminent death,
The brevity of this life,
And the assurance of my final breath.
Such is my political foundation.
Whether of a liberal or a conservative persuasion,
We either love one another,
Or else we all shall perish,
From ocean to ocean, from sea to sea,
Along with our dimorphic society.
And so now it has been said.

From the falls of Niagara
To the Mississippi’s mouth,
New York and California
Vote blue unlike the south.
(For Hamilton and Jefferson
Still duel for our nation’s head.)

Nevertheless, we shall all see eye to eye
From San Francisco to the Texas sky,
When come the final days.
Meanwhile in the Federal laze,
Republican powers are rapidly declining,
The Democrats are spending whilst dining;
Discotheques
And ghettos
Still dance a jig to the left,
While Wall Street jives
To the vanishing right.

Congress is in a haze.
And America is bereft
Of reason, of a visionary gaze.

Children weep in the streets today.
The western world is wild.
You! - Young, male seducers,
Without thought you conceive a child,
The woman is but your prey,
With whom you casually mesh.
And after she surrenders
To the weakness of her flesh,
To your bold enticements,
To your beauty, to your seed,
To your words, to your looks, to your natural charms,
You trade yourself in for what the government renders
In place of the basic need
Of a loving father’s tender arms.

And you! - Spineless statesmen,
Intolerant of all other ideas,
Save your own small, tiny, microscopic specks,
Hypocrites, all!

You shall spend our every dollar
Until we are all in abject poverty.
Wait come soon some terrific summer,
Come some horrid autumn,
Come some miserable, terrifying fall,
The crash of ’29 will seem like a sunny Saturday.
The dollar will cease to hold a penny’s sway.
It will be a colossal, collective ruin,
This savage bruin,
This future rue,
This approaching monster from out of the blue.
(Just add, my dear economist,
The sum of two and two.)

For what happens when the tide of debt
Reaches those with gold,
The aristocrats, the young who are privileged,
The poor and the old,
The poet who scribbles verse in the air,
The pilot of a jet?-
Now no one seems to care.
(Because it has not happened yet.)

But then, too late,
All factions will cave
Upon rocky, tragic shores.
Even Presidents,
Senators,
And Congressmen
Will become outright mendicants  
Wandering on a homeless glen,
Begging for dimes in corridors;

Suburbs and cities
Will join their disaster, their downfall, their fate;
For they shall resemble broken caves
Crushed like sand,
Beneath a storm of tidal waves,
With their greed and contraband.

And the farmer
With his fiddle,
Brown, with a bow,
Mahogany and long,
Will serenade our wavering grain
With the pain
Of a sorrowful swan song,
Beneath our once brave skies
Of a rich, dark blue.


Yet after all that I have been through,
Knowing that to give is to save,
If we fade like Greece and Rome,
At least I shall have a home
In the silence of my grave.




 ~ John Lars Zwerenz