[POEM] Five Poems by John Leonard
These are five poems showcasing some of Leonard's different poetic forms.
These are five poems showcasing some of my different poetic forms: Brown Thornbill Song and Rain on the Mountains are 'beauty in nature' pieces; A Portrait is a love poem to my wife, Caution is a short, sharp epigram and The Wonder is a short, short story in poetry, as usual with me set in a timeless but vaguely classical Greek setting.
Brown Thornbill Song
From a creekside tea-tree, in the length
Of a single phrase, both the present time
And first spring, both youth and joy
And experience, sadness, are caught.
From such a small bird the depth,
Richness of oriole-song almost;
Unexpected, familiar and grateful—
Unlooked for as living-truth itself.
Caution
You have caution, self-doubt, naturally—
But it’s not to hinder what you may do.
You have it so when asked
‘Can you do this?’, you will likely reply
‘Yes, but never to their specifications.’
A PORTRAIT
Autumn light slants down
Through branches and leaves interlaced,
Leaves still green though with
The odd yellow splash moving
In the depth of foliage…
She sits
Smiling and relaxed, her hair falling
Long about her shoulders, dark
With lighter streaks. The light
Plays about her with every kind
Of green, and some darker blues
And grey in shadows. At her feet
Are dried leaves not from the hazel
Overhead, but blown across the paving.
Her clothes are the leaf-shades
And the tree-clump richer by her,
Completed in shape and spread.
She gazes at the painter and beyond
And takes in everything in her look,
So the season, the light and tree
Are hers, opening from hazel eyes.
The Wonder
It was when a great crisis blew up—though
There had been warnings enough—omens abounded,
And the state was tottering. Their leaders gathered
In the temple, unsure what sacrifices to offer,
What prayers to repeat.
At that moment
A young man of great beauty and radiant person
Happened by, and, being acquainted with the facts,
Quietly told the elders what they must do.
He then when on his way again.
The correct sacrifices
And prayers offered, favourable portents observed,
They began asking who the young man was,
Some saying they knew him, so-and-so’s child,
And saw him daily, but others maintained
He was one of the gods themselves walking
The earth, instructing us.
And others
Began talking of the wonder that a beardless youth
Knew at once what must be done, when
Those called to lead did not.
It was then
That a greybeard said ‘The wonder was
That when the earth spoke with her portents,
We, children of the earth, did not know
What to do ourselves… without any prompting.’
Rain on the Mountains
There is rain on the mountains;
Iron-grey, pre-spring clouds roll
Over their tops, while bright sun
Plays on glittering eucalypt leaves—
Those leaves tossed by cold winds.
There is rain on the mountains
As the year revives, gladness
Along with it—life that had slept
Now wakes again, and I begin
To live in all my years.
John Leonard is an Australian poet with five poetry collections published. His poetry has been widely published, in Australia, the UK and the US and on the Internet, and some of his poems have been translated into various languages. His novel Shakespeare in Virginia was published in 2024 in London. Website: www.jleonard.net.