November 23, 2024

A Thought

    A Thought

    Have you ever
    gone for a walk in autumn
    and picked up an acorn
    then realized
    that in the palm of your hand
    is a whole tree?

Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
Daily Verse 2023


November 2, 2024

Concealed

    Concealed

    the earth
    warmer than air
    spinning a pearly veil
    cloaking everything within sight
    in mist

Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
Daily Verse 2023


October 20, 2024

Satan and Rally Hill

Standing in downtown Columbia, Tennessee, is the stately home known as “Rally Hill.” It is said that the site was once the location of a spring where people would ‘rally’ to rest and collect water. James Walker, brother-in-law of James K. Polk the eleventh president of the United States, built the home in 1843.

It was the first house to be constructed of brick in Maury County. The interior walls are three-brick thick with 12-foot ceilings downstairs and 10-foot ceilings upstairs. From its grand entrance hall, to the double twin-parlors, and the two-story detached kitchen, it is rich in history.

By the 1970’s, Rally Hill had been divided into apartments. The current owners were in the midst of restoring the old house and lived in the downstairs with two rented apartments upstairs. I lived in one apartment and a friend lived in the apartment across the hall.

Another friend was transferring to an out-of-town college and would be living in a dorm on campus that did not allow pets. This presented a problem for his pet boa constrictor named Satan. My friend across the hall volunteered to take care of Satan while his owner was away at school, but he would need the approval of our landlady. Surprisingly she agreed, but there was a condition – she did not want to wake up and find Satan in bed with her.

Satan was about 3-feet long and spent most of his time in a terrarium made from a large aquarium tank filled with gravel and covered with a screen top. Occasionally he was allowed to lounge on the back of a ladder-back chair in front of the television. My friend worked at night and I worked during the day. Late one afternoon just as I was about to leave work for home and my friend was to leave home for work, he called. Satan was missing. My friend had already searched his apartment and since he needed to go to work, he asked me to search his apartment again.

After arriving home, I went across the hall to my friend’s apartment. There was little doubt that he had made a thorough search of the apartment. My search also came up empty handed and I decided that a search of my own apartment would be wise. However, that search was also fruitless.

The following morning my friend faced the dreaded task of informing our landlady that Satan was lost – presumably somewhere in the house. She actually took it quite well. We all began a search of the downstairs of the house, but this search came up empty as well.

Rally Hill was included on the Majestic Middle Tennessee Fall Tour of historic homes. Since this was September, our landlady and her husband were busy preparing the house and grounds for the upcoming tour in October of which I was a guide. Though they were concerned for the whereabouts of Satan, there was also much to do to prepare the house for the tour. By the time of the tour, Satan still had not been found. We could only assume that he had managed to get outside of the house in search of food. Cold weather would soon arrive and since he was a tropical snake it was believed that the cold would surely mean the end of Satan.

By the following spring, there still had been no sign of Satan. My friend moved from Rally Hill and the owner used his apartment as a storage area for furniture while they continued remodeling the house. The apartment had been rented furnished, so the furniture that my friend had used remained there. The owner decided to use a couch that was still in the apartment for a den downstairs and sent it to a shop to be reupholstered.

Shortly after, the upholstery shop called to say that the remains of a large snake had been found in an arm of the couch. It was theorized that Satan had climbed into the couch and must have died there. The mystery of Satan’s disappearance was solved – or so we thought.

The following September, the owners were again preparing for the fall tour. One day, while preparing to clean their bedroom, the landlady was standing in the thick doorway that led from one of the twin parlors into the bedroom. To her side was a fireplace with a large mirror hanging above the mantel. She noticed something was behind the mirror. Since a teenage son had once used this bedroom as his own, she assumed he had tossed something that had landed behind the mirror. She reached behind the mirror to retrieve the object – and it moved.

She could not tell what the object was but knew it was alive. Her husband was at work, so she called a friend whose husband had recently retired. After arriving, the man unhooked the mirror from the wall and lowered it to the floor. There, coiled up on the mantle, was a large snake. After examining it the man thought it looked more like someone’s pet snake – like a boa constrictor.

The forgotten Satan was now remembered. My friend’s phone number was retrieved and the call made (not by the shaken landlady). He arrived with the long empty terrarium. He approached the snake, stroked its head, lifted him off the mantel and placed him in the terrarium. The mystery of Satan’s disappearance was solved – this time for sure.

Apparently, what the upholsterer found in the arm of the couch was where Satan had shed his skin. In hindsight, the owner remembered that during the winter she had not seen the usual traces of mice in the basement. Also, her dog who would normally only bark if he heard or saw someone outside the house, had been heard barking on several occasions from within another room. When the owner came into the room to investigate by looking out the windows or door, no one would be found. She never thought to look down at the floor. Of course, the irony was that Satan had been found behind the mirror in her bedroom only a few feet from her bed.

For the fall tour of historic homes along with its history and the stories about the Walkers and the Polks, we could now add a new more current tale. As I guided visitors through the grand old home and we came to the room where Satan had been found, I would gather the visitors at the doorway into the room and tell the story of Satan. As I came to the point in the story about the mirror and the object behind it, which was to their side, people would start backing out of the room. There were even visitors who refused to enter the room after hearing the story – even though Satan had departed Rally Hill.

Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
October 2024


October 12, 2024

Hopeful

    Hopeful

    There has been rain for days
    and even weary flowers
    are longing for the sun.

    Finally the rain stops
    and through a break in the clouds
    the arch of a rainbow is revealed –
        a promise.

Dan Hardison

For those in Western North Carolina affected by Hurricane Helene.


The Wise Owl
May 2024


September 27, 2024

Waning Summer

    Waning Summer

    Shadows stretch longer
    slanting across the landscape
    as days grow shorter.

    The evening sun
    flaming in amazement
    as it drops on the horizon.

    Mornings awake
    from longer nights
    to a fine veil of pearly mist.

    Garden blooms are fewer
    as cornstalks and gourds
    join rust-colored wreaths.

    Nuts and burnished leaves
    are covering the ground
    as the air turns cooler.

    A dazzling display
    of elemental colors
    as autumn beckons.

Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
October Daily Verse 2024


September 13, 2024

Safe Haven

    Safe Haven

    The day is very hot
    with a chance of thunderstorms.

    As predicted, it begins to turn dark
    and then a distant rumble.

    As it grows darker,
    the sound of thunder grows louder.

    Then suddenly, a flash of light
    followed by a loud boom.

    Once the shock is gone
    comes the sound of rain

    with the dog and cat
    together in my lap.

Dan Hardison


The Ravens Perch
May 2024


August 17, 2024

Turning Point

My poem Turning Point received Honorable Mention: 2024 Ekphrastic Poetry Contest, Craven Arts Council, New Bern, North Carolina. The contest was in conjunction with the 2024 Bank of the Arts National Juried Exhibition held at the Craven Arts Council gallery. "This competition showcases the link between different forms of art; the visual and the literary." My poem was paired with the painting Long Way Home by Cara Merritt, which also received an Honorable Mention in the exhibition.

    Turning Point

    The sea toils as it slowly
    makes its way to shore
    with waves lapping
       as it inches closer.

    At the end of its struggles,
    its destination reached,
    comes a moment of rest –
       a time of reflection.

    Then on the moon's signal
    it is time to begin again,
    to reverse course
       in this endless cycle.

Dan Hardison

Long Way Home
by Cara Merritt
(30x40 Acrylic)


Craven Arts Council


July 27, 2024

The Garden Lost

    The Garden Lost

    Beneath a canopy of trees,
    through a maze of encircling shrubs,
    walkways of brick are lined
    with urns, planters, and pots.

    A pond and a gazebo,
    benches for rest and reflection,
    all about are statues
    with St. Francis keeping watch.

    Much work went into this space,
    its design and intent are clear,
    but flowers have long been absent here
    weeds and vines now occupy this place.

    Walking through what was a garden
    overgrown and all but forgotten
    one can imagine what had been
    and what could be again.


Dan Hardison


The Ravens Perch
May 2024


June 27, 2024

The Rose

    The Rose

    The rose perched
    upon a green stem
    lifts its face to the sun.

    The frilly petals unfurled
    rimmed in red and pink
    and within the folds
    dew drops glisten.

    A sight to behold
    rendered in paint
    upon the canvas.




The Ravens Perch
May 2024


May 25, 2024


PAE24

Autumn's Arrival
(mixed media)
7" x 5"

Donated to PAE24
To benefit "MillHouse Foundation"
McKinney, Texas
Opening Exhibition and Sale, Sep 21 - Oct 10, 2024


(Formally TAE)

May 18, 2024

Lost

    Lost

    The poem went away
    And did not look back.
    — James Still


    Some might think
    it is writer’s block,
    but it’s not that words
    will not come,
    instead they come
    and then drift away
    lost somewhere between
    then and now.

Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
May 17, 2024


April 20, 2024

Two Poems

    Sounds

    Whispering winds of spring,
    rustling leaves of summer,
    the ground crunching in autumn,
    and the clatter of bare branches in winter –
    a world of earthly sounds
    beckoning of the land and seasons.



    In Winter Light

    Absent now the vibrant
    and earthy colors of autumn
    winter offers swirling shapes
    and sparkling transformations,
    feathery patterns in streams,
    and glossy suspended icicles,
    silvery heads of field grasses
    and beads of water frozen –
    monochromatic patterns
    on a frosted morning.

Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
April 2024


April 7, 2024


Quietude

My book Quietude is now available from Lulu Press.

"In this collection Dan Hardison combines words and images following the Japanese haiga – a combination of image and poem where one compliments the other. The writing in this collection was selected from a ten-year period beginning in 2009 when he had his first poem published and is fully illustrated using his photographs. The work included has appeared in print and online journals, and anthologies, some in slightly different form. These include Contemporary Haibun Online, Cattails, Daily Haiga, and Frogpond; plus past journals Simply Haiku, Haigaonline, South by Southeast, Magnapoets, Sketchbook, and moonset."

Quietude
By Dan Hardison
Published by Lulu Press.
2024, Paperback, 148 pages
ISBN: 9781304664990

Read Sample


March 2, 2024


And the Name Is . . .

Many parents will agonize for weeks to find just the right name for their new born child. Some will choose a name that they feel is distinguished, maybe a traditional family name, or the name of a famous person. The chosen name might be unique or just whatever is popular at the time. But whatever name a proud parent places on their child, the child will be stuck with it – at least until he or she is old enough to legally change it.

Some people have names where the last name is preceded my three or more names – Kiefer William Frederick Dempsey George Rufus Sutherland. (Not sure how you would fill out an official form calling for a first, middle, and last name.) There are those with just two names – a first and a last, and then there those of the music world who prefer just one name – Cher, Adele, Prince. Some people do choose to change their names, but not necessarily because they did not like the name they were given – Bob Dylan, Ringo Starr, Miley Cyrus.

Even if you stick with your given name, it might be shortened – Madeline could be Maddie, Mads, Maddy or Mae. (Never really understood how Robert becomes Bob or John becomes Jack.) There are names that could be a boy’s name or a girl’s name (with or without trick spelling) – Dana, Robin, Chris, Jordan. There are also names that could be a first or last name – Ray Charles, Jesse James. Names from history can sometimes seem odd simply because they have fallen out-of-fashion – Leonidas Polk.

Let us not forget the trick of being a Junior, the III, IV, V... In my case, James Daniel Hardison, Jr., sharing the same name with my father created mix-ups at times, but it was also a dead giveaway. “Oh, you must be Dan’s son.” Despite the fact that I was called Danny to distinguish me from my father. Then there was the teacher who insisted on calling all students by their “given” name. I had the choice of being called James or Daniel. Nicknames were strictly forbidden. And there are employers who refuse to use anything but the employee’s given name, first and last.

My advice to anyone struggling to find the perfect name for their child would be to choose the name you want to call the child by and make that their first name. A middle name is optional because the “official” world will just ignore it anyway.

By James Daniel Hardison, Jr.
James Hardison
Daniel Hardison
Danny Hardison
or just Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
March 2024


February 25, 2024


Three Poems


    The Key

    Rummaging through a drawer
    I come across a key
    that I do not recognize.

    Perhaps a house key,
    maybe not this house,
    but another now forgotten.

    I should throw it out
    the locks are probably changed
    but I won't, at least not yet.

    I may need this key
    to unlock a memory
    of some other place and time.



    Looking Within

    Today I came across
    an old book of poetry
    that I had purchased
    but then forgot.

    Opening the book
    two white petals fall out –
    rose petals lightly tinged
    and pressed flat.

    So, who could have left
    this simple keepsake?
    For what reason?
    And why this book?

    My mind wanders
    filled with curious thoughts
    stirred by rose petals
    found in a book.



    The Passing Day

    The cat
    is laying in the sun
    by the window.

    Beyond the window
    dead leaves are blown about
    by a wintry wind.

    Pots that had held
    blooms of summer flowers,
    are empty now.

    The Dogwood, Crepe Myrtle,
    and Rose of Sharon
    are bare limbed.

    I stand at the window
    gazing at a world sleeping,
    waiting for the season to turn.

    The cat
    is laying in the sun
    by the window.

Dan Hardison


The Ravens Perch
February, 2024


January 5, 2024


Enchanting

    Through summer
    shades of dusty green
    has sustained the trees.

    A dazzling show
    of earthy hues begins
    when autumn comes.

    Poplars, ashes, and birches
    wear radiant saffron,
    beeches shimmering copper.

    Oak leaves turn rosy bronze,
    hickories a tweedy russet,
    and aspens buttery gold.

    Maples are honey yellow
    but can be scarlet
    or riotous red.

    A delight for the eyes
    before the coming season
    of grey and white.

  — Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
January 2024