Again the garden wakes to tender green,
The crocus stirs beneath a softened sky.
The robin calls, and rivers yearn to fly,
Their thawing currents weaving silver sheen.
The buds proclaim what winters can’t unwean:
That buried roots endure though blossoms die.
A chorus swells where quiet once lay dry,
The earth recalls what once it has foreseen.
But winter comes with knives of glass and stone,
A breath that scalds, a hunger sharp and near.
It strips the boughs, it breaks the marrow’s bone,
And crowns the soil in silence cold and clear.
Yet still below, the pulse is not o’erthrown:
From ash of frost, the bloom returns each year.
About the Creator
Aspen Noble
I draw inspiration from folklore, history, and the poetry of survival. My stories explore the boundaries between mercy and control, faith and freedom, and the cost of reclaiming one’s own magic.


Comments (1)
Now I yearn for spring and winter hasn't even been here.