
A spring poem
You say you got a contest for a spring poem, right now it just ain’t in me to write any piece. For the sake of art I’ll give it a go let me tell you folks about spring and what I know: It comes after winter (Lord am I glad!) I’ve noticed some green where there was only brown, lovely buttercups sprang up it seemed like over night! The sun is more frequently seen sparring with rain clouds as the temperature rises grass will grown, lawnmowers will be exhumed thwarting all chances of sitting outside listening to the gentle sounds of nature. Still, birds will sing their songs while dinning on insects courting, mating and building nests while Mr. Smith douses his lawn with chem-green and Mrs. Doe sprays poisons for those awful bugs in her garden; polluting the air and drinking water, a small price to pay aesthetically speaking to keep up with the proverbial Jones’. As the low and high atmospheric pressures clash tornatic activity arrives, sirens sound. Sometimes I wonder, with the hole in the ozone the total lack of governmental environmental policy, the polar icecap melting, chemicals we use almost without thinking, why there are so few fireflies, June bugs, humming birds that were so common when I was a kid. Spring, may there always be another!


