Posted on

Farm Fog

Down where the lazy river bends,
A hectic tide of fog descendse
The homely cows I’ve come to milk
Are moth cocoons of thin gray silk.
The ghostly ash that guards these lands
Looms suddenly with cluctching hands,
And missing, drips a fiendish splat
Unsteadily upon my hat
From fog-beads strung along each twig.
They dance a mad abandoned Jig
And eye me as my lantern swings.
I’m not one who imagines things,
Yet I’m suspicious of each log:
There’s menace, somehow, in this fog–
The soul of something, writhing, tied…
My milking’s done; I’ll go inside.
I can’t feel foolish, though, before
I slam the friendly kitchen door.

by Ray Romine Saturday, February 2, 1952

Posted on

Fan

I note a few contemporaries feel
Let down if each day now is not ideal.
But I say weather has a right to moods
And changes, like a man’s vicissitudes.

For me, spring flies too quickly, giving way
To hotter months already crowding May.
In boots and raincoat, let me splash and sing
Cherishing each sodden moment of the spring!

by Ray Romine Monday, January 7, 1952

Posted on

Cold Start

Is your car these wintry mornings
Lying down upon the job?
Does it cough when you step on it,
Groan and shudder, heave a sob?

Well, don’t biame the old car too much–
Just recall, my son, instead
How YOU groaned and sobbed and shuddered
When YOU had to leave YOUR bed!

by Ray Romine Tuesday, February 27, 1934

Posted on

Apparel Carol

Sometimes parents must wonder whether
It shouldn’t be simple, predicting the weather.
For the children may start out in wet and in ooze
With the day turning fine if they wear overshoes,
But a sure-enough shower comes up if they roam
Leaving rubbers and raincoat etc. at home!

by Ray Romine Wednesday, August 31, 1949

Posted on

And Besides, School Starts This Month!

I hope it won’t sound like it’s pointless or silly
To mention Sentember has turned on the chilly;
For to us who-hate winter, it make’s quite a point
That the weather is throwing itself out of joint.

This edge to the morning’s predicting the frost
Which’ll mean my last round with the garden is lost.
It points to the ice and the snow and the sleeting,
The troubles with chimneys and plumbing and heating;

To the grief with our sinuses, tonsils and throat;
To the wrestling with muffler and jacket and coat;
To the fight with the car that won’t start in the mornings
(To have traded in ‘Forty-one, heeding those warnings!)

When the frost starts to heckle the pumpkins and gourds,
I envy the Calif. and Florida hordes.
(There’re some try to minimize all this by drooling,
“I love the Cold Weather!” but whom are they fooling?)

by Ray Romine Sunday, September 12, 1943

Posted on

All Wet

April showers, to my mind,
Are wetter than the other kind;
Or can it be that I don’t love ’em
Because there are so many of ’em??

by Ray Romine Monday, April 1, 1946