Winds of Seasons
MTheodern poetry modern verse contemporary poetry contemporary verse modern poem contemporary poem

The wind of wilt-washed spring departs and, weak,
Goes dying into summer. Grass and leaves
And blooms give in to heat as rainstorms sneak
Up slowly. Then their wind as blusters heaves
Away the petaled breath of June and May.
The wind of sweat’s July and August licks
With slobber. Steams on legs and arms betray
The whispers of the spring, and pets bring ticks
Inside our ruined rooms that suffocate.
The winds of autumn bring relief and thrill,
But even these are touched with winter’s hate.
The threatened blizzards whisper, “Winds shout, shrill.”
Wild winter winds are worst. They yank at coat
And scarf and bring on frostbite throat.
The nearly laughably anodyne illustration above the first line of the sonnet was generated by the woefully inadequate AI generator of Microsoft’s Bing. Note that in it there are not four seasons but there is one surrealistically chopped of pair of wings hanging near the bottom. It is my experience that this AI image generator is hilariously bad.
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