A Winter Pond
Sting-chill of winter matt –Her frozen hand caressed us all;
And calming bleach of silence
Pressed upon the rustic scape
To leave an ashen underbelly –
Once raging summer chroma.
Even Winter’s gelid lungs laboured
Under heavy drag of flakes –
Their pilgrimage: to stay a deadened floor
In crunch-white peace.
And round about, the weight of time
– Collapsing under Winter’s drag –
Transmutes to grey: it’s three o’clock –
No lights pricking black out here! –
Even the night globe,
The Great Reflector – stonewalled;
Camouflaged by lead-laden cloud
Lolling in the claustrophobic noon.
At ground, a farm pond –
Seized in a dark hiatus –
Offered up repentance –
Why, it dared to harbor life!
I forgave it in my desperate gaze
Upon the crazy-paving surface,
That sealed in the black-chill temperature,
Where at bottom, something nithered
Still survived.
Mark R Slaughter http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/a-winter-pond/
I found this poem whilst wandering around t'internet thinking about the cold and the impending snow. I really like it in general as I spend a lot of time staring at my pond in all seasons. It is as fascinating in Winter as it is in the Summer. I try and peer through the frozen surface to see if anything is moving below. I have, in years past, seen frogs frozen under its waters. That was horrible, I assume they were dead. I did fish one body out but never found any more, I shudder to think of it even now.
I love the language of this poem; I fully admit I had never heard of the word 'gelid', to me it sounds like it has escaped from the poem Jabberwocky. It means 'very cold, icy or frosty'; I know you all know that, I just explained it to remind myself really. It is my new favorite word. I shall go into work and say 'ooh its a bit gelid out there today' and they shall all nod in agreement.
I do love words that are new to me.