First Frost
by Christopher T. GeorgeFreeWrights Peer Review
Second Place, January 2009
Judged by Elena Karina Byrne
A last ochre magnolia leaf twitches
like the index finger of a dying man;
under the ginkgo, yellow leaves spread
& all the birds are in motion, swooping,
diving: robins, starlings, cardinals,
a brace of cheeky blue jays—o one vaults
into the magnolia like a trapeze
artiste and devours a bud.
"First Frost" is a Buddhist-like, automatopoetic polaroid view of nature, targeting our vulnerability of perennial-impermanence where a magnolia leaf "twitches like the index finger of a dying man." The use of assonance and subtle end rhyme keep the poem beautifully close-fisted, bud-like, ready to be devoured. --Elena Karina Byrne