THE GARDENER
Gardens and groves
and vineyards,
above and below him, grew.
It was only natural.
Not only was the earth
under his fingernails,
it was in his DNA.
Generations before him
were bauern
from Baden,
Liechtenstein,
and Schleswig-Holstein.
THE GARDENER
Gardens and groves
and vineyards,
above and below him, grew.
It was only natural.
Not only was the earth
under his fingernails,
it was in his DNA.
Generations before him
were bauern
from Baden,
Liechtenstein,
and Schleswig-Holstein.
METHINKS
Methinks
I am an actor
who plays to an audience of one --
myself.
And at times
that's a tough act
to follow.
© Breyel, Timm. "Methinks". All rights reserved. No part of this text may be copied, broadcast, reproduced in print or electronically represented without permission from the author.
OLD POSTCARDS
Tattered and faded
picture postcards
of nameless maidens,
and forgotten lands
set in exotic climes
and idyllic villages,
all framed in an age
when colonialism,
royalty and wars
reigned supreme.
Cursive impressions,
indigo inked
and penciled,
tell stories
of feluccas on the Nile,
Michaelangelo in the Sistine,
moonlit Balinese beaches,
trekking Machu Picchu,
homesick French soldiers.
Shared testimonials, all,
these timeworn paper tales
for a shilling or more.
Colourfully stamped
with squares,
rectangles,
triangles,
etched images
of Queen Victoria,
Belgian missionaries,
Honai huts,
kangaroos,
edelweiss,
biplanes,
and countless wonders of the world,
all postmarked from a bygone age.
Neither snow nor rain
nor heat nor gloom of night
stayed the Orient Express,
Special Delivery,
Zeppelin Luftpost,
or Boat Mail.
Horseman,
footman,
bicycle courier,
all kept their appointed
destination.
As I read the words,
I hear the voices
of friends,
of loved ones,
of acquaintances.
I imagine these picture postcards
when they reached the letterbox.
What joy,
what excitement,
what incredible news,
each card must have sparked
when remembered by one
who shared thoughts
and feelings from faraway.
© Breyel, Timm. "Old Postcards". All rights reserved. No part of this text may be copied, broadcast, reproduced in print or electronically represented without permission from the author.
The Rubicon is crossed
and the law is no longer sacrosanct.
Will the Republic ever return
to the land it once knew?
Or will it flow blood red
like the river of old?
© Breyel, Timm. "Rubicon". All rights reserved. No part of this text may be copied, broadcast, reproduced in print or electronically represented without permission from the author.
O-U How to pronounce O...U when you two are together? How is it? Bounce. Pounce. Trounce. O-U, you troublesome vowel. Don't make me ho...