Poetry

Showing posts with label thunder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thunder. Show all posts

Friday 23 June 2023

Ode to a lightning bolt

Where are you Oh Odin's thunder

With your head up in the clouds

Well isn't it a wonder

Lightning would strike

And you'd be caught under

That bolt from the blue

That has riven this old tree through

And split from its sides its ship-length timbers 

Going from the bells

Swinging in the tower

tolling in the wind with all of its power

Where are you now Mr Lightning Bolt?

Impulsivity is your nature

You feel the jolt

The knee jerk reaction

You can feel it in your knees

It will rain tonight

You can hear it in the trees

Get your feet back down to earth

And ground yourself in its dirt


Positive and negative and neutral

All your electrical impulses fuel

This storm, this tension

This heat

Then snap, of course

The live wire sparked

The sky just shorted

And found the easiest possible route


Where are you now the dogs have stopped barking?

Now the moon has stopped arcing.

The lights have stopped lightning.

And the drains have stopped draining.

All the water of the raining

Tell me where are you?

In my love spectroscopy in my love epiphany

Cacophony of kaleidoscopic free verse

Has anything changed?

Is anything worse?

Or are you just,

Down to earth?

Saturday 19 February 2022

StormZ

 

List of named storms (Z)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Storms are named for historical reasons to avoid confusion when communicating with the public, as more than one storm can exist at a time. Names are drawn in order from predetermined lists. For tropical cyclones, names are assigned when a system has one-, three-, or ten-minute winds of more than 65 km/h (40 mph). Standards, however, vary from basin to basin. For example, some tropical depressions are named in the Western Pacific, while within the Australian and Southern Pacific regions, the naming of tropical cyclones are delayed until they have gale-force winds occurring more than halfway around the storm center.

This list covers the letter Z .

Storms[edit]

Note: dagger indicates the name was retired after that usage in the respective basin
  • Zack
    • 1992 – tropical storm that remained over the open western Pacific Ocean
    • 1995 – Category 4 equivalent typhoon that struck the Philippines and Vietnam, killing 110 people
  • Zaka
    • 1996 – weak tropical cyclone that passed near New Caledonia, causing minor damage
    • 2011 – tropical cyclone that dissipated northeast of New Zealand, causing no damage
  • Zane
    • 1996 – Category 3 equivalent typhoon that crossed the Ryukyu Islands
    • 2013 – developed and dissipated between Queensland and Papua New Guinea
  • Zazu (2020) – tropical cyclone that brought heavy surf to Niue and hurricane-force wind gusts to Tonga, but caused no significant damage
  • Zeb (1998) – Category 5 equivalent typhoon that killed 122 people when it struck Luzon
  • Zelia
    • 1998 – tropical cyclone that developed near Cocos Islands
    • 2011 – severe tropical cyclone that brought heavy rainfall to New Zealand as an extratropical cyclone
  • Zeke
    • 1991 – passed over the Philippines before hitting Hainan with minimal damage
    • 1992 – tropical storm off the southwestern Mexican coast
    • 1994 – remained east of Japan
  • Zelda
    • 1991 – left heavy damage in the Marshall Islands
    • 1994 – powerful typhoon that took a large, circuitous track through the western Pacific Ocean
  • Zena (2016) – killed two people while passing near Fiji
  • Zeta
    • 2005–06 – remained out at sea; only the second Atlantic tropical cyclone on record to span two calendar years
    • 2020 – a late-season Category 3 hurricane that made landfall on the Yucatán Peninsula and then in southeastern Louisiana
  • Zia (1999) – moved across Japan, killing nine
  • Zigzag (2003) – tropical storm that made landfall in northeastern Mindanao
  • Zita
    • 1997 – killed 345 people when it struck southern China
    • 2007 – passed through French Polynesia
  • Zoe
    • 1974 – moved along the coast of Queensland
    • 2002 dagger – strongest South Pacific tropical cyclone on record in terms atmospheric pressure; affected the Solomon Islands, Fiji, Vanuatu, and Rotuma
  • Zola
    • 1990 – Category 3 equivalent typhoon that struck Japan, killing 3 people
    • 1993 – tropical storm that made landfall in Japan causing some flooding
  • Zoraida (2013) – killed 44 people while moving through the Philippines and Vietnam
  • Zorbas (2018) – Mediterranean tropical-like cyclone that formed and reached Category 1 equivalent strength
  • Zosimo (2004) – moved through the Marshall Islands
  • Zuman
    • 1987 – short-lived and weak storm that did not approach any islands
    • 1998 – struck Espiritu Santo as a Category 1 cyclone

See also[edit]

References[edit]

General

Sunday 26 August 2018

Bone Kissing

I didn't want to turn back
Didn't want to face the storm
That I knew would turn me black

Didn't know that I was torn
Like a rending thunder
Shaken to the very core
Of my foundations laying under

I never got used to your face
Never could learn to trace
The outline of your cheek
Nor to draw the breath you took
Just before you speak

I never learned to call you mine
Never learned to drink the wine
Never knew what a fine line
I had had to walk

And now we do not talk

I chose to come here
I chose to stay
I chose that some year
I would fly away

But the swallows return each Summer or Spring
Are they the same ones
Who left on the wing
Is it the same prayer
I can hear
The choir sing?
As their voices rise into the skies
Of a horizon forever setting

She plays the cello
On her own stage
Keeping back the fellow deer
Like a do rey me so far te da
Like a guardian of her age

She guards the garden
She turns on the hose
She turns over the earth that hardens
around the Summer rose

She is like a starling
Singing in a flock
Away arise, the may fly flies
Dragon fly alights upon a rock

Sweet streams and rivulets
Stun the lady Juliet
From her reverie of regret
In too many long walks

Suddenly the walls
Are trembling from the thunder
Suddenly all she knows falls
And is cast asunder

That the one strike fell
Like a hammer on a bell
Rung out the good
Rung in the bad
Wrung the clothes on the line
Wrung the water into wine

One fine day when I look back
It will not seem so blue
Just the Sun fading into black
Before from behind the clouds
It appears a new