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Wednesday, 25 April 2018

Listen


Diana Ashdown.


Listen

Listen, I have flown through darkness towards joy,
I have put the mossy stones away from me,
and the thorns, the thistles, the brambles.
I have swum upward like a fish

through the black wet earth, the ancient roots
which insanely fight with each other
in a grave which creates a treasure house
of light upward-springing leaves.

Such joy, such joy! Such airy drama
the clouds compose in the heavens,
such interchange of comedies,
disguises, rhymes, denouements.

I had not believed that the stony heads
would change to actors and actresses,
and that the grooved armour of statues
would rise and walk away

into a resurrection of villages,
townspeople, citizens, dead exiles,
who sing with the salt in their mouths,
winged nightingales of brine.

Iain Crichton Smith


This is one of those poems like “The Conflict” by C.Day Lewis, or “Thalassa” by Louis MacNeice and several others that I’ve posted, in which the speaker clearly sees the difficulty and struggle in their circumstances and nonetheless chooses to work toward hope. The poem talks about swimming upward through the soil like a fish, but I have this picture in my mind of a seed sprout pushing its way toward the surface as well. The images are wonderful – the statues walking, the “resurrection of villages” – and the description of life as such an “interchange of comedies, disguises, rhymes, denouements”, so true. Can we too, fly birdlike, swim fishlike, (or reach flower or treelike) toward joy, toward light and hope? Is it possible to believe that the darkness is where we start? That this is where joy is rooted?




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