Wednesday, 1 March 2017

I Carried With Me Poems

Leonid Osipovich Pasternak


I Carried With Me Poems

I carried with me poems, poems which spewed out of
  everything; I saw poems hanging from the clotheslines,
  hanging from the streetlamps: I saw poems glowing in
  the bushes, pushing out of the earth as tulips do;
I felt poems breathe in the dark March night like ghosts
  which squared and breathed through the air;
I felt poems brushing the tops of chimneys, brushing by in
  the dark; I felt poems being born in the city, Venuses
  breaking through a shattered sea of mirrors; I felt all the poets of the city straining,
  isolated poets, knowing none of the others, straining;
I felt that some gazed into the March night, looking, and
  finding; 
and others were running down steep streets, seeking,
  and seeking to embrace;
and others stood in empty bookstores turning over pages
  of fellow poets whom they loved but didn't know;
and some pondered over coffee growing cold, in harshly lit
  cafeterias, and gazed at the reflections of the eaters in the
  wall-to-wall mirrors;
some dwelt on what it was to grow old;
some dwelt on love;
some had gone out of time;
some, going out of time, looked back into time, and started;

I felt all of their lives and existences, all with poems at
  their center;
I knew none of these poets;
but I felt these intimations augured well, for me, and for
  poetry;
and my steps grew big, giant steps, I bounded down Parker
  Street;
a tall, taciturn, fast-walking poet's accomplice.

Gail Dusenbery 

I like that line - " I carried with me poems." I have, I do. And yes, there is this line of connection with the poets themselves as well, Are there poems being written and sweated over right now? Poems that I will read and love and carry with me? 


 

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