• Submit Poetry
  • Support SCP
  • About Us
  • Members
  • Join
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Society of Classical Poets
  • Poems
    • Beauty
    • Culture
    • Satire
    • Humor
    • Children’s
    • Art
    • Ekphrastic
    • Epic
    • Epigrams and Proverbs
    • Human Rights in China
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Riddles
    • Science
    • Song Lyrics
    • The Environment
    • The Raven
    • Found Poems
    • High School Poets
    • Terrorism
    • Covid-19
  • Poetry Forms
    • Sonnet
    • Haiku
    • Limerick
    • Villanelle
    • Rondeau
    • Pantoum
    • Sestina
    • Triolet
    • Acrostic
    • Alexandroid
    • Alliterative
    • Blank Verse
    • Chant Royal
    • Clerihew
    • Rhupunt
    • Rondeau Redoublé
    • Rondel
    • Rubaiyat
    • Sapphic Verse
    • Shape Poems
    • Terza Rima
  • Great Poets
    • Geoffrey Chaucer
    • Emily Dickinson
    • Homer
    • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
    • Dante Alighieri
    • John Keats
    • John Milton
    • Edgar Allan Poe
    • William Shakespeare
    • William Wordsworth
    • William Blake
    • Robert Frost
  • Love Poems
  • Contests
  • SCP Academy
    • Educational
    • Teaching Classical Poetry—A Guide for Educators
    • Poetry Forms
    • The SCP Journal
    • Books
No Result
View All Result
Society of Classical Poets
  • Poems
    • Beauty
    • Culture
    • Satire
    • Humor
    • Children’s
    • Art
    • Ekphrastic
    • Epic
    • Epigrams and Proverbs
    • Human Rights in China
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Riddles
    • Science
    • Song Lyrics
    • The Environment
    • The Raven
    • Found Poems
    • High School Poets
    • Terrorism
    • Covid-19
  • Poetry Forms
    • Sonnet
    • Haiku
    • Limerick
    • Villanelle
    • Rondeau
    • Pantoum
    • Sestina
    • Triolet
    • Acrostic
    • Alexandroid
    • Alliterative
    • Blank Verse
    • Chant Royal
    • Clerihew
    • Rhupunt
    • Rondeau Redoublé
    • Rondel
    • Rubaiyat
    • Sapphic Verse
    • Shape Poems
    • Terza Rima
  • Great Poets
    • Geoffrey Chaucer
    • Emily Dickinson
    • Homer
    • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
    • Dante Alighieri
    • John Keats
    • John Milton
    • Edgar Allan Poe
    • William Shakespeare
    • William Wordsworth
    • William Blake
    • Robert Frost
  • Love Poems
  • Contests
  • SCP Academy
    • Educational
    • Teaching Classical Poetry—A Guide for Educators
    • Poetry Forms
    • The SCP Journal
    • Books
No Result
View All Result
Society of Classical Poets
No Result
View All Result
Home Poetry Beauty

A Poem on the Season of Depression: ‘Yet’ by James A. Tweedie

December 14, 2022
in Beauty, Poetry
A A
13
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

.

Yet

The withered dune grass slumps beneath a sere
Gray frozen sky, as winter tag-teams fall
And nighttime frost compels the Black-Tailed deer
To seek out warmer lairs beneath the tall,

Cone-laden Sitka spruce. The screech of jays
Intone a requiem for summers past,
And fading memories of once-lived days
Grieve “might-have-beens” that long-since breathed their last.

As chill-red sunsets summon forth the stars
And darkness shrouds a world entombed by night,
With lidless eyes we carry unhealed scars
Of broken dreams and wrongs not yet made right.

Yet each new dawn, a-bloom with lightful hours,
Will bear the scent of spring, new hope, and flowers.

.

.

James A. Tweedie is a retired pastor living in Long Beach, Washington. He has written and published six novels, one collection of short stories, and three collections of poetry including Mostly Sonnets, all with Dunecrest Press. His poems have been published nationally and internationally in The Lyric, Poetry Salzburg (Austria) Review, California Quarterly, Asses of Parnassus, Lighten Up Online, Better than Starbucks, Dwell Time, Light, Deronda Review, The Road Not Taken, Fevers of the Mind, Sparks of Calliope, Dancing Poetry, WestWard Quarterly, Society of Classical Poets, and The Chained Muse. He was honored with being chosen as the winner of the 2021 SCP International Poetry Competition.

ShareTweetPin
The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary.
Read Our Comments Policy Here

RandomPoems

‘Street 3/4’: A Poem by Shamik Banerjee
Beauty

‘Street 3/4’: A Poem by Shamik Banerjee

July 8, 2024

. Street 3/4 On both sides of this street, there are small stores Of groceries, canned food, medicine, and toys....

National Poetry Month Limerick Challenge
Limerick

National Poetry Month Limerick Challenge

March 12, 2026

  Limerick Poetry Challenge Write a limerick (learn how to write one here) about a famous poet or about writing...

Next Post
‘Supplication to Erato and Melpomene’ and Other Poetry by K.S. Anthony

'Supplication to Erato and Melpomene' and Other Poetry by K.S. Anthony

‘At Brighton Beach (July 19, 2021)’ by Paul A. Freeman

'Lessons in Love' by Susan Jarvis Bryant

‘Toward Yehuling, 1211’ by Talbot Hook

'Toward Yehuling, 1211' by Talbot Hook

Comments 13

  1. Paul Buchheit says:
    3 years ago

    Nice sonnet, James!

    Reply
  2. Cynthia Erlandson says:
    3 years ago

    This is exquisite, James, with many clear images reflecting the title. The jays intoning a requiem for summers past is really wonderful. And juxtaposing the shroud covering the night, with lidless eyes, says so much in a few words.

    Reply
  3. Paul Freeman says:
    3 years ago

    Fantastic stuff – and full of wisdom.

    It can take a lot to cheer us up these days – and you have with that final, brimming-with-positivity couplet.

    Thanks for the read, James.

    Reply
  4. Damian Robin says:
    3 years ago

    I love the uplift after the falling negatives of loss, dim colours, and regretful observation of clumps of life drifting away. It tells us all is not lost, a whiff of newness is always present in the fitful hours of morning and a potential bouquet of undescribed blooms.

    Reply
    • Damian Robin says:
      3 years ago

      Love the photo, James. Almost like barbed wire keeping the sun away, fitting the octave of the sonnet but touching on the possible flowers (or growing vegetation, at least) in the closing couplet.

      Reply
  5. C.B Anderson says:
    3 years ago

    This poem, James, gives me a lot to chew on. First of all, what is a black-tailed deer doing seeking shelter underneath a tree that is native to the South Pacific? In “darkness shrouds a world entombed by night” you seem to have doubled down on the depression theme, and we can both be glad that we don’t live in Spitzbergen. I’m not sure how “with lidless eyes we carry unhealed scars,” but the image is arresting, and, of course, your poetic license has no expiration date. If nothing else, you have mastered mood and the mysterious role of the pesky hyphen.

    Reply
    • James A. Tweedie says:
      3 years ago

      C.B.

      Lololol You caught me in one of the biggest brain freezes ever! Having lived in Hawaii for 17 years I am more than familiar with the Norfolk Island Pine, there having been a large specimen on my church property in Mililani (it’s worth mentioning in passing, that early explorers trans-planted them across the Pacific with the thought that, when grown, they could be used to replace damaged masts).

      Somehow this vestigial memory slipped in where the words, Sitka spruce, were supposed to go (I have a large specimen of this tree directly behind my house).

      Only an expert gardener would have likely caught my blunder and I, for one, am glad you did, since someday the poem may appear in print and that would amplify the embarrassment and humiliation all the more!

      As for lidless eyes, that is an allusion to what is all too often our human inability to “turn a blind eye” to the “unhealed scars of broken dreams and wrongs not yet made right” that haunt us from our past, including all those “might-have-beens.”

      And yes, there are several phrases in this poem of which I am quite fond. “Chill-red sunsets” is one. “Lightful hours” is another. And, last but not least, “lidless eyes.”

      For posterity I will request Mike to make the appropriate correction to my arboreal error.

      Reply
      • Paul Freeman says:
        3 years ago

        Arboreal Anthitheses Limerick

        When writing of trees, please stay calm,
        or else you might spread much alarm;
        for oaks aren’t a place
        where a sloth shows its face,
        nor do bears climb a coconut palm.

        Reply
      • C.B Anderson says:
        3 years ago

        God’s in His Heaven, and all is right with the world.

        Reply
  6. James A. Tweedie says:
    3 years ago

    Paul,

    So funny! Now if I can only figure out the difference between an opossum and a possum, and the three-toed and two-toed sloth (I do know that I represent the five-toed species of the latter).

    I no longer, however, climb trees of any kind.

    Reply
  7. Roy Eugene Peterson says:
    3 years ago

    I really love your imagery and smooth depiction of depression, “Yet” hope. I identify with: “With lidless eyes we carry unhealed scars of broken dreams and wrongs not yet made right.” Then I am refreshed with your words: “Yet each new dawn, a-bloom with lightful hours, will bear the scent of spring, new hope, and flowers.” “Yet” is a wonderful name for your poem!

    Reply
    • James A. Tweedie says:
      3 years ago

      Thank you, Roy. Evan added the descriptive pre-title which I think captured the contrast between the gloom and the bloom, so to speak! I am pleased that it spoke to you in a personal way. May your Christmas and New Year bring with them the scent of spring, hope, flowers along with the sound of angels.

      Reply
  8. Alena Casey says:
    3 years ago

    This is an exquisite poem. Your vocabulary is striking, paired with particularly effective enjambment. You are quite a wordmaster!

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. Joseph S. Salemi on ‘On An Old Photograph’: A Poem by Joseph S. SalemiMay 13, 2026

    Thank you very much, Paul. I suppose the most frightening thing about monumental historical changes is that, when we are…

  2. C.B. Anderson on Winners of Friends of Falun Gong 2026 Poetry Competition AnnouncedMay 13, 2026

    This is grim stuff, no doubt, and the idea of becoming friendly with the Chicoms is antithetical to any moral…

  3. Roy Eugene Peterson on ‘Creation of Mom’: A Mother’s Day Poem by Roy E. PetersonMay 13, 2026

    Thank you, Paul for the commendation!

  4. Paul Freeman on ‘On An Old Photograph’: A Poem by Joseph S. SalemiMay 13, 2026

    I enjoyed how the everyday events of life are placed against the monumental changes happening around the parents and the…

  5. Paul Freeman on ‘Creation of Mom’: A Mother’s Day Poem by Roy E. PetersonMay 13, 2026

    I enjoyed the joyousness of this poem, Roy. It starts with a fun stanza to set the tone and gallops…

Subscribe to Daily Poems

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,593 other subscribers

Recent Poems

  • Winners of Friends of Falun Gong 2026 Poetry Competition Announced
  • A Poem on Coach “Black Mike” Castronis from Athens Y Camp, by Alec Ream
  • A Poem on the Zambian National Park Mosi-oa-Tunya, by Paul A. Freeman
  • ‘Creation of Mom’: A Mother’s Day Poem by Roy E. Peterson
  • ‘Spontaneous Conjugal Combustion’ and Other Poems by Susan Jarvis Bryant
  • ‘The Man in the Moon Was a Very Round Man’: A Poem by Lauren V. Leon
  • ‘Fibromytrauma’: A Poem by Golan Shahar
  • ‘A Lonely Sliver’: A Poem by Katie Tencza
  • ‘Higher Gas Prices Are a Small Price to Pay’: An Iran War Poem by Mark F. Stone
  • ‘Always Ahead’: A Poem by Scharlie Meeuws
  • ‘Hamlet’s Lawyer’ and Other Poetry by Brian Yapko
  • ‘On An Old Photograph’: A Poem by Joseph S. Salemi
  • ‘Faust Foresees His End’: A Poem by Martin Briggs
  • ‘À la Carte’ and Other Poetry by C.B. Anderson
  • ‘Where the Sweet Bluebonnets Bloom’: A Poem by Roy E. Peterson
  • ‘The Waters’: A Poem by Margaret Brinton
  • ‘The Pinnacle of Poetry’ and Other Poems by Russel Winick
  • The First American Sonnets: An Essay on David Humphreys, by Margaret Coats
  • ‘The Holy Rollers on Poetry’: A Poem by Joseph S. Salemi
  • Sappho’s ‘Poem 1’ Translated by Bruce Phenix
  • ‘The Cautionary Tale of Phone Addicted Mimi’: A Poem by Paul A. Freeman
  • ‘Look Away’: A Poem for America’s 250th Anniversary, by Roger Crane
  • ‘Sunday Morning in Canada’: A Poem by Jeffrey Essmann
  • ‘Bean’: A Poem by Jan Mennite
  • ‘The Swan’s Song ’: A Poem for Shakespeare’s Birthday, by Susan Jarvis Bryant
  • ‘The Gravedigger’: A Poem by Marie Burdett
  • ‘Waiting for the Perfect Man’: A Poem by Janice Canerdy
  • ‘The George-A-Saurus’ and Other Poetry by Brian Yapko
  • ‘When Asked: What’s Your Favorite Season?’: A Poem by Paul Millan  
  • ‘The Last At-Bat of Lyndon Braun’: A Poem by Michael Pietrack

Categories

  • Acrostic
  • Alexandroid
  • Alliterative
  • Art
  • Best Poems
  • Blank Verse
  • Chant Royal
  • Classical Poets Live
  • Clerihew
  • Covid-19
  • Deconstructing Communism
  • Educational
  • Epic
  • Epigrams and Proverbs
  • Essays
    • Interviews with Poets
    • Poetry Reviews
  • Featured
  • From the Society
  • Great Poets
    • Dante Alighieri
    • Edgar Allan Poe
    • Emily Dickinson
    • Geoffrey Chaucer
    • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
    • Homer
    • John Keats
    • John Milton
    • Robert Frost
    • William Blake
    • William Shakespeare
    • William Wordsworth
  • Human Rights in China
  • Limerick
  • Love Poems
  • Music
  • Pantoum
  • Performing Arts
  • Poetry
    • Beauty
    • Children's Poems
    • Culture
    • Ekphrastic
    • Found Poems
    • High School Poets
    • Humor
    • Riddles
  • Poetry Challenge
  • Poetry Contests
  • Poetry Forms
    • Curtal Sonnet
    • Haiku
  • Poetry Readings
  • Rhupunt
  • Rondeau
  • Rondeau Redoublé
  • Rondel
  • Rubaiyat
  • Sapphic Verse
  • Satire
  • Science
  • Sestina
  • Shape Poems
  • Short Stories
  • Song Lyrics
  • Sonnet
  • Symposium
  • Terrorism
  • Terza Rima
  • The Environment
  • Translation
  • Triolet
  • Video
  • Villanelle

Quick Links

  • About Us
  • Submit Poetry
  • Become a Member
  • Members List
  • Support the Society
  • Advertisement Placement
  • Comments Policy
  • Terms of Use

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Poems
    • Beauty
    • Culture
    • Satire
    • Humor
    • Children’s
    • Art
    • Ekphrastic
    • Epic
    • Epigrams and Proverbs
    • Human Rights in China
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Riddles
    • Science
    • Song Lyrics
    • The Environment
    • The Raven
    • Found Poems
    • High School Poets
    • Terrorism
    • Covid-19
  • Poetry Forms
    • Sonnet
    • Haiku
    • Limerick
    • Villanelle
    • Rondeau
    • Pantoum
    • Sestina
    • Triolet
    • Acrostic
    • Alexandroid
    • Alliterative
    • Blank Verse
    • Chant Royal
    • Clerihew
    • Rhupunt
    • Rondeau Redoublé
    • Rondel
    • Rubaiyat
    • Sapphic Verse
    • Shape Poems
    • Terza Rima
  • Great Poets
    • Geoffrey Chaucer
    • Emily Dickinson
    • Homer
    • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
    • Dante Alighieri
    • John Keats
    • John Milton
    • Edgar Allan Poe
    • William Shakespeare
    • William Wordsworth
    • William Blake
    • Robert Frost
  • Love Poems
  • Contests
  • SCP Academy
    • Educational
    • Teaching Classical Poetry—A Guide for Educators
    • Poetry Forms
    • The SCP Journal
    • Books

© 2025 SCP. WebDesign by CODEC Prime.