Seven by seven
This poem started with an unusually early snowfall. I’ll tell you the rest of the story after you read the poem.
Snow falls softly on cedars;
fat white flakes sift down, pile up;
branches bend, protest in pain;
white cones burden bunched berries;
autumn grass falls flat below
an ermine cloak; drifting specks
draw a veil across distance.
Night settles softly on snow;
fat flakes of darkness suck in
the fading light, a black pall
slung over a silent land;
sounds soak into snow’s duvet;
lights down the road blink,
wink out, leave no one, nothing.
Warmth spreads softly on faces;
butter-bright tongues of flame tell
tales of generations, circled
close around the campfire-glow,
soaking up the comfort of
the pool of holiness that
drives away the dark and cold.
by Jim Taylor, November 2020
Now the story. Sometimes, when would-be poets ask my advice, I tell them not to let the poem’s structure hamstring them. That is, don’t set out to write a sonnet, a rondeau, a sestina, with a defined meter and rhyme, because if you do, you’re performing an exercise – like playing scales instead of making music. Say what you want to say; if it doesn’t fit a predetermined template, too bad.
In this poem, I broke my own rule. As the snowflakes fell outside, I thought of the title of a novel, Snow falling softly on cedars (David Guterson, 1994). That gave me my opening line, with seven syllables in it. On a whim, I decided to try making all the lines seven syllables. And then I amplified that model, by making each verse seven lines too.
In this case, I think it worked.