Showing posts with label Poems About New Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poems About New Mexico. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 30, 2017

The Road to Magdalena, New Mexico - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

The Road to Magdalena, New Mexico

The wind is cold, a Colorado cold,
Blowing the summer back to Mexico
From whence it came; it sat upon this land
For dreary months of heavy, lifeless heat.
But now the desert dawn is blue; the stars
Make one last show before withdrawing to
The Caves of Night beyond the timberline,
Where no man walks, for fear of ancient gods.

This desert dawn is blue with promises;
The road to Magdalena creeps beneath
The ridges where the Watchers of the night
Seem now content to still their thunderstorms,
And grant a grateful pilgrim sunlit hours.
There will be coffee in Magdalena,
And not much else. The cattle drives have ceased,
And the railroad is gone; the school is closed,
As are the saloons.  But there should be coffee.



Tuesday, December 4, 2012

THE ROAD TO MAGDALENA, by Lawrence Hall

I have forgotten to mention that my new vanity collection of poetry, The Road to Magdalena, is available from amazon.com on kindle for .99 (yes, cents), and from amazon.com as bits of a dead tree for $6.95. 

Look for it under Lawrence Hall or Lawrence Mack Hall (I forget which); the "Lawrence" instead of "Mack" is a tiresome, irrelevant story.