My annual summer mountain poem.

I’m not terribly happy with this reading — I had a cold at the time, and it certainly sounds like I rushed through it a bit.  I still have fun with the poem, though.

That moon still sails past my window every night.

*****

“Roanoke Summer Midnight”

Its midnight moon is newly minted coin —
a white-hot silver obol
forged in burning phosphorus.
The crisping clouds around it blacken.
Its silhouetted mountains
are great blue gods at slumber
the faded-haze azure horizon’s
giants in the dim.

Those slopes have known a billion bones of hares
that raced upon them other midnights, then,
pausing, one by one,
drawing up their downy legs at last to final sleep.

Where the Shenandoahs’ driving
beryl falls to black,
aquamarine to onyx,
lay legions of hares — generations resting.
There are the hills where ivory
rabbits sleep among gods.

Ahead and under moonlight
the curving rural road obscures its end.
At right, an intersecting well-lit modern block
confuses the curling topography.
The fresh and symmetrical asphalt’s angle
mars the winding thoroughfare with order:
a ninety-degree anachronism.

That new and perfect subdivision
affronts the corner’s antebellum chimney,
broken down to stones and overrun in lavender
— its lilac colors driven plum by sunset.
That last century’s smokestack
was itself effrontery once
to the formless places where natives stayed
their only edifice the stars,
their only currency the blinding coin of moon.

Eyeing, then, the summits’ crowning cobalt
driving down in royal blue to coal,
I hope to one day take my rest
there, in the darkening indigo,
alongside giants,
among white rabbits in myriad easy stillness,

to pause myself at last and sleep beneath
what meadows stretch in cerulean dark,
where hares will race like moon-kissed silver,
or comets of darting pearl.

(c) Eric Robert Nolan 2017

 

Cover to “Red One” #2, Terry Dodson, 2015

Image Comics.

RedOne_02-1

Roanoke,Virginia, July 2018 (4)

Church Avenue between the Circuit Court and the Texas Tavern.  The impressive church that you see (this town has a lot of them) is Greene Memorial United Methodist Church.

 

20180723_144409

20180723_144607

20180723_144615 (2)

20180723_145305

20180723_145248

 

Cover to “Detective Comics” #577, Todd McFarlane, 1987

DC Comics.  Part of the “Batman: Year Two” storyline.

I keep thinking of Todd McFarlane as a 90’s phenomenon, because that was when I started reading comics.  It’s weird seeing a cover by him that was published when I was in high school.

Detective_Comics_577

 

Roanoke,Virginia, July 2018 (3)

Salem Avenue and Campbell Avenue, just south of the railroad downtown.

 

20180723_142959

20180723_143058

20180723_143218

20180723_143442

20180723_143710

20180723_143729

“Since Auschwitz, we know what man is capable of.”

“Since Auschwitz, we know what man is capable of. And since Hiroshima, we know what is at stake.”

— Viktor E. Frankl, Holocaust survivor and author of “Man’s Search for Meaning”

 

Viktor Frankl, österr. Psychologe und Arzt. Photographie. Um 1949.

 

 

Roanoke, Virginia, July 2018 (2)

5th Street Overpass near the Virginia Museum of Transportation. Mill Mountain is in the background.  If you look closely at the sixth photo, you can see what looks like a gutted fighter jet to the right of the two antiquated trains.  I can only assume those are connected with the museum. (So, too, is the rusting hulk in the seventh.)

 

20180723_141719

20180723_141732

20180723_142249 (2)

20180723_142452

20180723_142538

20180723_142615 (2)

20180723_142033

20180723_142828

Cover to “Moebius Comics” #1, Moebius, 1996

Caliber Comics.

1678634dcfb45b8d5ba10eb88a11

Memories of a Catholic Childhood – a poem by Sam Rose

Sarah's avatarAmethyst Review

Memories of a Catholic Childhood

The coming together of hands
in prayer, falls somewhere along
the spectrum of comfort and peace
as if someone else is there, as if
anyone else can see.

The coming together of hands
in a way that Jesus’s own could not
in the end
are we not all just like we were
when we sat cross-legged on the
wooden floor and before reciting the
words we knew, we would contemplate
whether the thumbs should cross over,
securely folded, or align side by side
and we looked to our peers as they
sat beside us heads bowed, to copy
their finger formations and wonder
whether they were properly praying
or simply waiting for the teacher
to say ‘amen’ and for it all to be over.

The coming together of hands
as if in prayer, but not, just a brief pose
like revisiting the street where we…

View original post 81 more words

Cover to “Spy Hunters” #8, Ogden Whitney, 1950

American Comics Group.

2239886-spy_hunters_8

Nurse Your Favorite Heresies in Whispers