Spring’s Embrace

Gaia’s motley cloak
Swirling around tripping step
Fresh grass between toes

Gaia (noun)

the global ecosystem, understood to function in the manner of a vast self-regulating organism, in the context of which all living things collectively define and maintain the conditions conducive to life on earth; (also) the theory which proposes this.

Oxford English Dictionary

Motley (adjective)

variegated in color; made up of many different people or things

Merriam-Webster

Tripping (adjective)

proceeding with a light, easy movement or rhythm.

Dictionary.com

An Ode to Fragile Night

Oh meiscus moon
You filled my night with Barmecidal light.
Each moment I stared upon you,
With hope and delight, wishing you would turn
Your gaze back upon me.
Sweet sliver in the sky,
You held nothing but an auxiliary candle
To the glory of daylight.

Auxiliary (adjective)

offering or providing help; functionary in a subsidiary capacity; supplementary or constituting a reserve

Merriam-Webster

Barmecidal (adjective)

giving only the illusion of plenty

Dictionary.com

Meiscus (noun)

the curved surface of a column or liquid; something having a crescent shape

Wordthink

Plume

The ostrich bloom 
ostentatiously embellished
her already peccable
sense of self.

Embellish (transitive verb)

to make beautiful, as by ornamentation; to decorate; to add fictitious details to exaggerate the truth.

Wordthink

Ostentatious (adjectivie)

attracting or seeking to attract attention, admiration, or envy often by gaudiness or obviousness; overly elaborate or conspicuous; characterized by, fond of, or evincing obstentation

Merriam-Webster

Peccable (adjective)

liable to sin or error

Dictionary.com

A Poop Joke

Full of donnish flair and a pensive confidence,
His funsies often included incontinence.

Donnish (adjective)

bookish, pedantic

Dictionary.com

Flair (noun)

a skill or instinctive ability to appreciate or make good use of something; talent; inclination or tendency; a uniquely attractive quality; style

Merriam-Webster

Funsy (noun and adjective)

diversion, entertainment, fun; often in for funsies; in order to amuse oneself; a prank or practical joke

Oxford English Dictionary

Rest Well, My Friend

A tangle of letters destined to trip the tongue
Reminder of the caducity of expression
A tremor in the hand, a stutter in the mouth
Become a mutual nod of acknowledgment.

The metathesis leaves me silent
What molecules make up the soul?
Eudemonic accident we met,
Cruel fragility we part.

Caducity (noun)

frailty, transitoriness

Dictionary.com

Eudemonic (adjective)

relating to or conducive to happiness

Wordsmith

Metathesis (noun)

a change of place or condition, transposition of two phonemes in a word, a chemical reaction in which different kinds of molecules exchange parts to form other kinds of molecules

Merriam-Webster

Debt Worth Paying

He willingly applied his John Hancock to the purchase of
Peacocks, Champaign glasses, fireworks for the final
Girandole of the evening.

This is our bada din, he had reassured her as she dressed in
silks, lace, and pearls, glimmering and redolent
Against a lake of light.

Bada din (noun)

a notable or significant day esp one on which an important festival or momentous event takes place

Oxford English Dictionary

Girandole (noun)

a radiating and showy composition such as fireworks; an ornamental branched candlestick; a pendant earring usually with three ornaments hanging from a central piece

Merriam-Webster

John Hancock (noun)

a person’s signature

Dictionary.com

1%

Sedulous career 
planning did not lead to the paradisiacal
ease he had once craved
but turned into his litigious
growl, driving away even his closest
allies.

Litigious (adjective)

of, relating to, or characterized by litigation; tend to engage in lawsuits

Wordthink

Paradisiacal (adjective)

of, like, or befitting paradise

Dictionary.com

Sedulous (adjective)

involving or accomplished with careful perseverance; diligent in application or pursuit

Merriam-Webster

Lull-a-bye

 Her burgeoning stomach
Caused passersby to stare
Shaped like a hummock
She felt only the impair

Before the diagnosis
She was fond of his kiss
After the meiosis
She had become a tmesis

Burgeon (verb)

to send forth new growth, sprout, bloom; to grow and expand rapidly, flourish

Merriam-Webster

Tmesis (noun)

the interpolation of one of more words between the parts of a compound world, as be thou ware for beware or abso-freakin-lutely

Dictionary.com