
EXPOSED!
Through the summer night and day
spider spins her life away
weaving gossamer entrapments
for her unsuspecting prey.
Threads from clothes upon the line
between my beans upon the vine
and when I go through my front door
I break more threads ticklish and fine.
Until one misty day in fall
from tiny shrubs to cedars tall
each lacy trap in white is sketched.
The fog has come, exposing all!
© 2015 by Violet Nesdoly (All rights reserved)
I wrote this poem quite a few years ago, when I still had a garden. But it’s as true as ever. Each year at about this time, I’ll go out one misty morning to see spider webs everywhere. Busted!
This post is linked to Poetry Friday, hosted today by poetry farmer extraordinaire, Amy LV at The Poem Farm.
I love that misty morning when the webs are like mist, shaped into huge snowflakes. Great photo and poem.
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Thank you, Brenda. What a great comparison–spider web snowflakes!
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Your beautiful picture was the inspiration. 🙂
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What a gorgeous photo, Violet! I like “gossamer entrapments” and the clandestine mood that you disrupt with the exposure at the end!
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Thanks Tabatha. I remember the feeling of smugness I had when I saw all those webs the first time it happened. I was shocked at how many there were, I mean, they were everywhere! No wonder I kept running into them.
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“Busted!” I am laughing! So so true. That comparison to clothes on the line and the thought of them all appearing when fog comes…perfect. And what a photo! I always try to take photos of spiderwebs, but they never look like this. Happy Poetry Friday! xo
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Thanks Amy and for hosting! As for those web photos, it takes just the right amount of dew and a certain slant of light. Patience + serendipity. 😉
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Reblogged this on Science & Faith Matters and commented:
Did you know that you can find the spider in the Bible? Check out Job 8:14 and in Adam’s Animals – Fun Facts about God’s Creation you’ll find the spider featured on page 78.
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Thank you, Kim! You’re such an encouragement.
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Love the poem and the photo! Yes, I know exactly what you mean. On those days you can really see the webs I discover that our dense green bushes are spider apartment buildings.
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Love your picture of bushes as spider apartment buildings. Indeed. I wonder if they are aware of each others space?
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Those are some gorgeous webs! Thanks for the lovely poem — gossamer entrapments indeed :).
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Thank you so much, Jama!
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We just so rarely have fog & mist, perhaps in the night, but oh you’ve captured these so beautifully, in the picture & the words, Violet. Spectacular! I wrote of spiders last week too, but those who enter at this time, not at their best like yours!
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Thanks Linda! My grandkids, with their sharp eyes and keen observation have given me a new appreciation for all things critter.
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That bit of irony when fog exposes the web. Love your image. Spiders are fascinating.
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Thanks Margaret! Trust you to pick up on that little detail about the fog exposing something for a change 😉
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Violet,
I love the picture and the rhyme scheme on you poem is lovely. Thank you for sharing your fall with me. Cacti do not change colors in the fall.
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Spending the fall with cacti would be a new experience for me! What are the signs of fall where you live?
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Exquisite, Violet! You capture such beautiful moments in film and words.
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Thank you so much, Michelle!
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Wow. Gorgeous photo, and your poem is all kinds of perfect. I DID catch the ironic twist at the end, with the fog exposing for once, instead of hiding! Well done!
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Thanks, Mary Lee! 😉
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