The Ice King Poem

Procession of the King
Spring had blessed the Earth with green and flowers all of myriad shade,
and Summer slowly warmed the soil; fields were filled with crops and hay.
Reluctantly the summer yielded to the coming signs of fall,
and stores were gathered in each home, wood chopped, shared and stacked for all.
Fall was long and tarried late, leaves held fast through cool November,
but no one doubted they would feel the Ice Kings wrath before December.
So the things their Fathers taught them were prepared and put in place,
with hopes the King might come and go and they be shielded from his face.
Jack (Scruffy) Ainsworth
3/09/14

Arrival of Ice King
That’s not a song the wind is singing; no, tis threat of whats to come,
The choir that heralds the Ice Kings path, harbingers to worlds undone.
Through the night they voice their pain as subjects of the frozen soul,
that cares not for the strong or weak, with ice formed scythe lays all low.
Across the waters dark and frothing, with child like glee he makes his way,
up to the shore and up the coastline, none prepared the cost to pay,
For should he see there measure done to slow or end his Winter ride,
He shrugs his cape and all do shudder, turrets fall thatched roofs fly.
His steed glows blue under moonlight, with eyes that shine a yellow green,
and frost from out his nostrils billow, and few may live if they have seen.
Up the hillsides down the valleys thundering hooves announce the King,
and with each stride all lay before him; great and small all living things.
He lashes out his thunderous crop, peels like cannons echo wild,
deep silver snows rush down the mountain carrying man, woman, child.
No power known can stay his hand, no wise man knows the path he’ll ride,
but all know when and where he’s been and know he will not be denied.
Jack (Scruffy) Ainsworth
2/07/14

False Hope
When from under the Ice Kings cloak the village folk beheld the Sun,
and slowly ventured from their hearths with timid steps and coats undone.
They met their mates where worn paths crossed and there did boldly boast
We held the King at bay my friends, to his passing hail and let us toast.
Yet nightfall held a secret close as darkness claims the King as friend,
there while the village breathed relief from frigid grasp and howling wind,
with mighty roar the gale did come, sweeping in circles the barren ground,
with glee and fury the Ice King twirled and lay his thick white cloak back down.
The Village folk were found sure lacking, stores all spent and wood all burned,
and with no path to woodland open, the Ice King smiled, from all cries turned.
Many the prayers fast ran from thanks to begging for the Winters cease
and many the prayers that went unanswered, with their thresholds piled chin deep.
Twas a time of sure repentance, twas late for such and it mattered not,
In the Ice Kings realm they lay shivered, less strong soon no longer fought,
Twas the year of 14 lads when half the seaboard lay cold as stone,
and none will ever raise glass again and toast aloud “The Ice Kings gone.”
Jack (Scruffy) Ainsworth

The Ice King’s Ire
Thrice the Ice King slammed his staff hard against the frigid floor,
once would serve to freeze the world but angered so he struck twice more.
Fowl in flight were rendered solid falling from the sky to land.
Beasts lay shivering, scarcely breathing from the stroke of his deft hand.
Men who thought they’d faced the worst, were facing worse than all before,
as avalanches fell from mountains with the Ice Kings horrid roar.
Oaks and pines fell sure as matchsticks in the path of rushing snow
and all the world cringed and shook from highest peak to valley low.
Naught could stave the Ice Kings wrath nor any soul discern the reason,
that the Ice King be so raged as to render deadly season.
All could be done was wait and pray and hold each other through the night,
for fuel was scarce, the oil all gone, no fire to warm, no stove to light.
The Ice King sat high on highest ridge and with steely gaze looked down
no mercy there for man nor beast could in his frozen heart be found.
All man may do is know his place and know that Monarchs roam the sky
and come and go just as they please. We may but pray that they pass by.
Jack (Scruffy) Ainsworth 02/07/2014

Too Early Spring
The vision of the Ice King’s clear at night while mortal’s fear unknown,
and yet they sang their odes to Spring before they knew her grasp was gone.
She’d tried to hold against the might, that at a whim lays all things low,
She’d brought forth flowers, leafing trees, signs that Winter should soon go.
Evening seemed to enter kindly, with just a breeze and friendly touch,
And townfolk strolled out through the fields for they’d missed the evening
oh so much,
Lanterns lit the valley floor like fireflies in the tall field grass,
and voices hailed to friends were echoed up the walls and down the path
But in the halls the Ice King angered, “Who here dares to name my time?
Not early Spring, nor man nor god, the will of Winter’s none but mine.”
Spring pled for lenience on the land and said, “thrice now you have wrought pain”,
To which the great King clenched his fist and said “they’ll know my will again.”
The darkness crept up o’r the eve, and covered all with fine cool mist,
not so to bring alarm up quick and spare the Ice King’s falling fist,
Next a chill, not cold, not bitter, just enough their coats to cinch,but warning to the wise
of age who’d seen such things and still lived thence.
They told the young ones to head homeward, but they laughed with deafened ear,
They told them of the times gone past, when Spring had come but disappeared.
They told them of the Ice King’s might, reminded them of recent straifs,
But the young were not dissuaded: “Then see yourself, back to your place”.
The first assault was blinding, stinging, hailstones rained like molten stone,
stripping leaves off sapling trees, an inch may well been miles from home.
The archers of the King drew back their shafts laced now with a razored ice,
and volleyed untold rounds at will, felling all caught by the night.
The next wave came as Northern gale descended driving shrouds of sleet,
The paths turned mud, the lamps blew out, with dark upon they could not see.
Oaks snapped and fell, cries went up, and none could find the others hand,
and those who’d made for home sat silent, knowing what befell the land.
Morning came and with it tears, roofs were torn, loved ones lost,
and warning words old ones had spoke, were scarcely comfort for the cost.
And quickly as the King had come and leveled all in his domain,
he disappeared and left the morning to be spent in grief and pain.
And from that time, they mark the days and listen when the old ones speak,
and tremble as they touch the Spring, but know her hands to be too weak.
The great Ice King will not be hurried nor told when he should come or go,
and Spring cannot withstand his force though man’s desire should wish it so.

Jack (Scruffy) Ainsworth 03/03/14
The Ice Kings Retreat
The orphaned child sat by the wall, the only wall left of her home,
and sat from morning’s still till eve and wished return of what was gone.
She waited there as if for word that all had been a cruel dream,
and could not form the words to say should she face the horrid King.
As she sat, she took a stick and making patterns in the snow
drew an angel; childlike, simple or how one looked she would suppose,
then with one stroke of the stick a glimpse of yellow caught her eye
and digging round it found a crocus; sign that Spring was still alive.
The Ice King felt a stinging pain, and let aloud a mighty gasp
and knew forthwith that Spring had risen and his time had come and passed.
For once one flower has been found there begins the rite of Spring,
and nine months more shall come and go before the return of the King.
Down the Village path she ran, the child with flower in her hand,
and seeing what she held aloft, word spread fast across the land.
To song and dance the ice did melt, late in the night the torches burned,
as Spring applied her gentle touch and kissed the soil with her return.
For one bloom can defeat the King, one child bear the fragile sword,
that brings to yield the howls of Winter, the Ice King and his mighty horde.
All know that he will return and do his worst three seasons hence,
but for now a child and flower have cast the evil Ice King thence.

Jack (Scruffy) Ainsworth 03/09/14

The Son of the Ice King

Twas in the days when Kael was young, before the shadows ceased to be.

When sun and moon and stars above gave light to land and light to sea.

When night air, hummed with lutes and pipes, and sounds of feet on wooden floors 

clapped like thunder to the tunes and all who danced called out for more.

Kael sang and played the fife, a handsome lad, with girls all smiles,

and worked the days on Father’s farm, herding sheep and mending stiles

So it was no chance of fate, that Friday found him at the dance,

calling steps, playing light, placed young and old in music’s trance.

So happy was this hamlet’s folk, that word of such spread far across the land,

From the cliffs above the sea thru valleys and up the mountain side again.

And so it fell  upon the ears of all that joy and peace could there be found,

and as with all that exude life, there are those who’d take it down.

Far to the North, so far away, that Shishire folks had placed no name,

were castles built of solid ice, where the cruel Ice King held his reign.

“I’ll send my son, to see first hand, this verdant land and wondrous times

and having none here claim this day that if tis true will make it mine.

Eron was the Ice King’s son, and held no love where none exists

but as the King commanded such he filled the duties of a Prince.

“Go, and cross the Southern lands and find this place, see it’s gleam

and gather things that I would know; return and tell it all to me.

What is this joy; what is this peace? It angers me to think it true.

Go, find these peasants, seek them out, I await the word from you.

And music? Dancing? Merriment? I’ll strip them all from out their hand

and place my mantle o’er their village, silence, cold will fill their land.”

And thus, did Eron set for Shilshire, riding on a ice gray steed,

hooves clicked upon the frozen bridge, to the bidding of the King

Night came soon as Eron rode, towards the borders of the shire

to reap the wind and ice rain down serving at the Kings desire.

Perspective on the priority of disease and transition

As I sit in my chair with my diagnosis of Terminal Mesothelioma; I am struck by a humorous irony. I recently spent 8 days in the hospital; having laid out on the kitchen floor at 4 a.m. thinking I was breathing my last and OK with that; however, I ended up in the ER with C diff, Legionaires disease, heart arythmia and the inability to breathe. The humor is found in that I must work to recuperate from these maladies so that I can get back to the business of expiring. I have outlived my diagnosis for 16 months and intend to keep swinging for the outfield until its done; but damn, this is tiring.

The Cup

There is a cup, made of clay, not much to look at as it is.

It sits in quite obscure a place, overlooked and always missed.

Few have ever laid eyes on it, fewer still know what it’s for

but there it sits, plain and simple, among goblets not a star.

Once a day some elder fellow, picks it up with steady hand,

and pours it in a flask he carries, each day he returns again.

No one pays him much attention; no one seems to really care

what he’s doing much less why, but every evening he is there.

When it rains he’s there more often, empties that cup several times,

Into the flask with calm intent, that aging gent, with soft sad eyes.

One day I could wait no longer and asked him: What is this you do?

He looked at me and softly said: “I empty this old cup for you”.

Surprised at this I engaged  further: “I did not leave that cup here.”

To which he said “But you did fill it; these are all the angels tears.”

Jack Scruffy Ainsworth

3/18/15

Associations and meaning

What does a particular song, poem, quote,touch; mean to you? The variance between people is profound, but seems to be tied to when and where you are in your growth and path. I am reminded of this frequently and find that when younger I preferred the straight forward and succinct. Now much older; I dig much deeper and tend to extrapolate and examine my thoughts and response. I think timing may be backward. You need this when young.

All reactions:

4Jennifer Amox, Deborah Mailahn and 2 others

Perspective of time and significance

Found in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco, Orthoceras are an extinct Nautiloid cephalopod that lived from the Ordovician Period to the Triassic Period (500 – 200 million years ago).

We have two of these small towers of this fossil. Kind of puts a perspective on our insignificance. There is an old verse that says “God counts all of man’s wisdom as foolishness.” If I had to sit around for billions of years and watch a bunch of squirrels destroy their own futures but the futures of everything; I believe this would be the logical uttering to make.

And the lowly shall rule

Some native tribes believe the raven put the world in place. Then there are hundreds of religions with different deities; all with corresponding origins. I am now wondering if a dung beetle had anything to do with it? They do roll things up into a ball and push them around. Just thinking.

Predispostion

If we are predisposed to see faces and objects in stone or leaves or other mediums; then perhaps we are predisposed to hear voices as well. Our task becomes to discern which to follow or listen to: our lasting contribution becomes that which we held closely and nurtured. Each breath a separate lifetime; each heartbeat a gateway to our private world