Season Dream(s) by Dale Barrigar Williams

(This week we are pleased to present work by one of America’s under-appreciated writers and academics, Dale Williams Barrigar, who is also the Co-Editor of this site. He has wonderful twin daughters and a damn fine pack of Dogs, too.)

(Image provided by DWB)

Cabin blizzard on Halloween

visiting Alaska

in the evening

every single flake

that falls

memory of you

as

October branches

scratch

at cabin window

sleeping gone

grizzly bears somewhere

near here

but I’m not fearful

Mr. Sasquatch

but what am I trying so hard

swooning

for

as

the last stripe

of red sunlight

now falls down

around old autumn

apple tree

shadows

crooked trunk

tree branches

turbulent truculent

dreams of another world

in only half sleep

all night long

next morning

November

One

there is an

alone woodpecker

in sudden sunlight red and gray

and his feathers too

are red and gray

as his drummings

on the tree they

sound

like rock and roll…

Dale Williams Barrigar

5 thoughts on “Season Dream(s) by Dale Barrigar Williams

  1. Dale

    Tremendous tone, comforting, then uneasy and quiet again. For whatever reason it placed “DABDA” the five stages of grief in mind, with the movement from Halloween to the Big Day (which most forget) itself. And there is the wonderful “every flake a memory of you” section that adds memory.

    And thst is a perfect picture you provided!

    Alive unto itself.

    Leila

    Like

  2. chrisja70778e85b8abd's avatar chrisja70778e85b8abd says:

    Hi Dale

    “Cabin blizzard on Halloween” great opening!

    Sparse perfect sentences fill the mind with images and a haunting loss.

    “the last stripe

    of red sunlight” That was excellent and perfectly placed.

    There is a lonely isolation that is expressed by the remoteness of the cabin and the forlorn language.

    The poem makes you feel good with the descriptions of nature. It refreshes the mind with the wintry Alaskan air. It would be one that I would read again to feel this. Like when I read some of Emily Dickinson’s work.

    Excellent!

    Christopher

    Liked by 1 person

    • DWB's avatar DWB says:

      Christopher

      Thanks for drawing out the yin and yang aspects of this, or even the bipolar aspects of it – the combo (and interpenetration) of darkness and light. All told in the way Time and the Seasons move, like a Jungian archetypal progression.

      And congrats on your new story on Literally Stories today. I’m heading over there in a few minutes to put commentary under it. It cannot have been an easy story to write, but it is good enough that it makes you a peer of (or superior to) Denis Johnson and Raymond Carver. No doubt about this whatsoever…

      Dale

      Liked by 1 person

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