Poetry

“Advice for Beginner Poets,” “Asters & Irises,” and “Autumn is a tiger”

advice to poets
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Advice for Beginner Poets

Conjure a faun in the middle of field.

There’s a cabin in the distance, homespun

& brown, & the thick-torso’d wild turkeys

march a few feet away, leaving dinosaur

tracks in their wake.

Don’t let any of this stop you.

Draw that circle with your fallen branch-

wand & wait.

He will grow from the ground like wheat,

slowly, but he will be so much more

than that.

He will stand before you with furred legs,

hooves, & curly hair & play a flute,

whatever songs you want.

No one else will see him.

Can you trust him?  As far as you trust

yourself.

And when the field is covered in snow

& wind blows through the thin cabin

& the turkeys, fattened by summer

raspberries & sunflower seeds, roost

in bald trees, you will find faun

hoof prints everywhere, hear notes

drifting like firewood smoke

from the logs you light.

~inspired by Jacek Malczewski’s “Art in the Manor,” 1896

Asters & Irises

We think of asters as round, spiky, purple, as lovely

as their family name, asteraceae.  Truth is, the eye

is queen when it comes to flowers, to everything really,

& she names them according to thought’s bloom.

So maybe asters are fan-shaped, adobe-colored, pleated.

Maybe they’re like easels, kidney-shaped, splashed

with mauve, a velvet violet, a blue older than humans,

sunset, jade, the saffron center of a bearded iris,

a hibiscus bulls-eye.  Maybe each petal is a brick,

porous, sun-swallowing.  Or perhaps each petal

is a pinwheel, silver-flashed on one side, scimitar-

curved, popsicle-hued on the other.  Or it could be

that sun has tangled fuzzy florets, glazed blades,

then swooped flowers up into cups to be drained

of dew by human irises.

~inspired by Aristarkh Lentulov’s “Asters”

Autumn is a tiger

stalking us from all directions

with her slow sinuous alchemy—

stripes morphing from jade to citrine

to carnelian to ruby—before reclining

lusciously in the grass.

September is a cub, barely cool, hardly

banded—October is when she opens

her mouth with gusts keen as fangs

& bites skin & bark.  Rain is her roar,

a baptismal rush

slicking street & highway under iron

skies.  At Samhain she lashes her tail,

& branches bang into each other

& shake off leaf shards, finally

bared of finery,

& the naked season begins in earnest,

when folk reach for pine & scramble

to cover pretend trees with garlands

of sage & cinnamon, beaded stripes

that pale in comparison.

Autumn is a tiger that December lulls

to sleep, only occasionally rising

with bobsled bellies to pounce & feast

on subnivean rodents, then curl up

luxuriously in snow.

~inspired by Erte’s “Autumn”

About the Author

Taunja Thomson

Taunja Thomson’s work has been featured in several journals, most recently in Midsummer House Dream and Bare Hill Review. She co-authored Frame and Mount the Sky (2017) and is the author of Strum and Lull (2019) and The Profusion (2019). Her full-length collection, Plunge, was published in 2023 by UnCollected Press. Her poem “Mr. God Comes to Understand Himself” won first place in The Ekphrastic Review’s “Tickle Me Pink” contest in August of 2025.