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Home Poetry Beauty

‘Phoebus’: A Poem by L.M. Shearer

August 22, 2024
in Beauty, Poetry
A A
9

.

Phoebus

I saw the sun catch in your hair,
Your silhouette against the glare.
I heard your laughter rise and fall
And shatter in the frozen air.

The sun sank down behind the trees
Yet brighter suns burned in your eyes.
You set the darkened woods agleam
With secret fires that no one sees.

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You strung the banners of the dawn,
A pink and fiery denouement.
I wrapped myself in dried-up leaves
And with the silent trees looked on.

.

.

L.M. Shearer is a teacher from the Pacific Northwest.

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Comments 9

  1. Kevin Farnham says:
    1 year ago

    Beautiful! With greater attention to meaning and rhythm than rhyme, but with quality rhyme nonetheless. As poet, the word “that” in line 8 would still keep me wondering: should it be “fires that no one sees” or “fires no one sees”? Which would be best? You can argue both ways. Excellent work!

    Reply
    • L.M. Shearer says:
      1 year ago

      Thank you, Kevin!

      What a fun conundrum. I think it depends on whether you say “fires” with one syllable or two. In my west coast accent, “fires” is one syllable, so I need “that” to be the unstressed syllable in the line. But if you had a sort of drawl and said “fi-yars” that would slightly alter the rhythm of the line. The joys of dialect!

      Reply
  2. Paul Erlandson says:
    1 year ago

    I’m late to getting around to reading this, but it’s lovely. I truly enjoyed it!

    Reply
  3. Paul Freeman says:
    1 year ago

    What marvellous imagery. And very exact in it’s form and line lengths.

    Reply
  4. Cynthia Erlandson says:
    1 year ago

    Beautiful, especially in its unified light imagery. Also, I love the laughter shattering in the frozen air — what an intriguing description!

    Reply
  5. jd says:
    1 year ago

    It IS a lovely poem. I love the final line also.

    Reply
  6. Margaret Coats says:
    1 year ago

    Light, sound, motion, warmth, and color feature in this drama of Phoebus. The speaker who experiences it claims to be silent and wrapped in dried up leaves, surely an inadequate covering. Intriguing contrast!

    Reply
  7. Adam Sedia says:
    1 year ago

    A delightful love poem that is interesting in not comparing its object to the sun, but noting the effects of the sunlight on her/him. Rhyming “denouement” with “on” was also a nice touch.

    Reply
  8. Shamik Banerjee says:
    1 year ago

    It was a joy to read your delightful poem, L.M. Thank you for sharing it.

    Reply

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