Tuesday 30 May 2017

The Trees

Benoît Trimborn

The Trees


The trees are coming into leaf
Like something almost being said;
The recent buds relax and spread,
Their greenness is a kind of grief.

Is it that they are born again
And we grow old? No, they die too,
Their yearly trick of looking new
Is written down in rings of grain.

Yet still the unresting castles thresh
In fullgrown thickness every May.
Last year is dead, they seem to say,
Begin afresh, afresh, afresh.

Philip Larkin

Poems about trees. I wonder how many I will collect here. The trees always seem to be telling us something. I don't even think the non-poetic can deny that. This time they are encouraging us by example to put the past behind us and begin again. What was that poem a few months ago? Begin, by Brendan Kennelly. It's a recurring theme, and one that I seem to need to hear. The belief that I can indeed shake the old leaves off and begin afresh is utterly essential to my sense of hope. As long as I can start again - I will. Year after year, day after day, hour after hour, if need be. Afresh, every moment.


Monday 29 May 2017

Paring the Apple

Brita Granstrom, "Boy Peeling Apples"

Paring the Apple

There are portraits and still-lifes.

And there is paring the apple.

And then? Paring it slowly,
From under cool-yellow
Cold-white emerging. And...?

The Spring of concentric peel
Unwinding off white,
The blade hidden, dividing.

There are portraits and still-lifes
And the first, because "human"
Does not excel the second, and
Neither is less weighted
With a human gesture, than paring the apple
With a human stillness.

The cool blade
Severs between coolness, apple-rind
Compelling a recognition.

Charles Tomlinson

Oh I like this one. So cleverly showing how our system of categories, of arranging things so that we feel we have a grasp of what they are and where they fit, well, it doesn't work. It doesn't cover all the subtleties, the idiosyncrasies, the distinctions. Here we have a portrait that has elements of still life, or, we could also say a still life with human qualities. I find it so intricate how Tomlinson talks about the knife dividing between things - paring and dividing are such human activities - showing how even as we separate and delineate objects, we reveal their likenesses and similarities. Without realizing it, we participate in a mysterious unifying and mirroring element, Even as we endeavor to classify and categorize and seek to understand, we step deeper into the mystery. Lovely to think about, if you ask me.

Just to be clear - I don't claim to know what a poem means, I merely enjoy it and make whatever sense of it comes to me. It's quite likely that I miss the point of it entirely. Some poet is laughing at me right now, or would be, if only they knew what I was writing here.








Saturday 27 May 2017

Let Us Hurry

Junko O'Neill

Let Us Hurry

Let us hurry to love people they depart so quickly
the shoes remain empty and the phone rings on
what's unimportant drags on like a cow
the meaningful sudden takes us by surprise
the silence that follows so normal it's unbearable
like chastity born simply from despair
when we think of someone who's been taken from us.

Don't be sure you have time for there's no assurance
as all good fortune security deadens the senses
it comes simultaneously like pathos and humor
like two passions not as strong as one
they leave fast grow silent like a thrush in July
like a sound somewhat clumsy or a polite bow
to truly see they close their eyes
though to be born is more of a risk than to die
we love still too little and always too late.

Don't write of it too often but write once and for all
and you'll become like dolphin both gentle and strong.

Let us hurry to love people they depart so quickly
and the ones who don't leave won't always return
and you never know while speaking of love
if the first one is last or the last one first.

Jan Twardowski


A poem for my friend who misses her mother.

Another "let" poem for the collection. I just stumbled across it and that first line stopped me short. We learn from death to love fervently. I don't know of many poems that manage to cram it all in like this one does (I wish he'd left the dolphin part out, but that's just me). That line "don't be sure you have time"  - that's the kicker. We really do benefit from a sense of urgency - may our senses always be awake and alive to the fact that the time to love is now.





 


Friday 26 May 2017

This Poem Needs Garlic


Susannah Blaxill




This Poem Needs Garlic

Needs smashing flat, skin picked
off in splinters, minced and fried
to a light almond sizzle, rescued
barely before burning. Needs a raw slice
at first scratch of a throat, needs all night
with a stinging chest poultice.
Needs to be which—the many clasped tight,
or the few, that split with one crack
into fat easy peelers?
Needs a full bulb simmered for hours.
Oh, salt it, soften to paste.
This poem wants plump and juice.
To be pulled from dry ground
in August, rip of roots,
the hole of itself
blurring dirt. To sweat
the smell of feet.
To be called Stinking Rose,
undo beige silk wraps in a swish
showing violet stripes.
Needs starting out mild, needs finishing
fevered in spice.
I know this poem needs
the combo pack, hardneck
for freshness, softneck
for storability.
Needs a papery shift
to slip from a firm shape
like a bicyclist’s calf. This poem
gets every clove pumping.
This poem is revealing
what’s like a pinch of breast. Really,
this poem needs to rest
three weeks, until the outer coating
dries and separates
only very slightly from the body.

Molly Tenanbaum



There aren't a lot of poems about garlic. But there are some, and that makes me smile. I like how this one uses garlic like in a recipe, as if a poem were a dish - and it is, when I think about it. It's food for the mind and soul, it's something you savour, it's nourishing - so having "tasted" one , it makes perfect sense to say "this poem needs garlic", like I would say "this soup needs salt". 





 

Tuesday 23 May 2017

To Daffodils


Jean Francois Millet



To Daffodils

Fair Daffodils, we weep to see
You haste away so soon;
As yet the early-rising sun
Has not attain'd his noon.
Stay, stay,
Until the hasting day
Has run
But to the even-song;
And, having pray'd together, we
Will go with you along.

We have short time to stay, as you,
We have as short a spring;
As quick a growth to meet decay,
As you, or anything.
We die
As your hours do, and dry
Away,
Like to the summer's rain;
Or as the pearls of morning's dew,
Ne'er to be found again. 

Robert Herrick

Why is it that beauty so often makes us think of loss? Is Time always stealing our joys? Is the fact that they are slipping away from us part of what makes them so precious? Sometimes I wish there were more poems about things that stay - "Stay! stay!" I do not want the beauty to fade. I want it to last. 



 

Monday 22 May 2017

May 20: Very Early Morning


Erin Hanson


May 20: Very Early Morning

All the field praises him/all
dandelions are his glory/gold
and silver all trilliums unfold
white flames above their trinities
of leaves all wild strawberries
and massed wood violets   reflect his skies–
clean blue and white
all brambles/all oxeyes
all stalks and stems lift to this light
all young windflower bells
tremble on hair
springs for his air’s
carillon touch/last year’s yarrow (raising
brittle star skeletons) tells
age is not past praising
all small low unknown
unnamed weeds show his impossible greens
all grasses sing
tone on clear tone
all mosses spread a spring–
soft velvet for his feet
and by all means
all leaves/buds/all flowers cup
jewels of fire and ice
holding up
to his kind morning heat
a silver sacrifice

now
make of our hearts a field
to raise your praise

Luci Shaw 


I can't get over that "make of our hearts a field". Now here's a poem that makes me instantly happy. Praise is a remarkable thing - it lifts and lightens the person praising, it changes things. Oh I can't even talk about this poem, I love it. 






 
https://soundcloud.com/user-978696454/very-early-morning-luci-shaw

Sunday 21 May 2017

Benediction

Caspar David Friedrich

Benediction


For what we are given.
For being mindful of what we are given.

For those who grieve and those who celebrate.
For those who remain grateful in the face of everything.

For the assembly of words that links us together.
For individual speech that becomes speech shared.

For the transformations a written page may effect in us.
For those who pay attention.

For the teachers who gave us the chrysalis of language.
For the comrades of the heart who left us signposts.

For the parent who gave us the one ethic of discipline.
For ourselves who may take discipline to heart, and not resent it.

For the second chance that is the writing down.
For those who know that half of poetry is silence.

For the language of breath, and the breath that is prayer.
For those who wake to light, and know the depths of sacrament.

For this common meal, and us who bow our heads and partake.
For those who remember that “So be it” is also written

Amen.


Nicholas Samaras

There are times when I need a moment to pause and breathe in a lungful of air. A moment to remember the good, to hold it in mind, savour it, allow it to expand within me in thankfulness. Those moments where breath is prayer, where silence is like a blessing. Those moments where I am aware that even the humble details are holy and rich with meaning.






    

Friday 19 May 2017

Old Smoothing Iron

Edgar Degas

Old Smoothing Iron

Often I watched her lift it
from where its compact wedge
rode the back of the stove
like a tug at anchor.

To test its heat by ear
she spat in its iron face
or held it up next her cheek
to divine the stored danger.

Soft thumps on the ironing board.
Her dimpled angled elbow
and intent stoop
as she aimed the smoothing iron

like a plane into linen
like the resentment of women
To work, her dumb lunge says,
is to move a certain mass

through a certain distance,
is to pull your weight and feel
exact and equal to it.
Feel dragged upon. And buoyant.

Seamus Heaney


Seamus, Seamus, your poems fill me with such affection. Who is this woman you observed at her work? A mother, a sister, a wife? It doesn't matter who, I suppose. What does matter is that you saw it, and it stayed with you. Here's a woman working - and you are not insensitive to what that work demands. I like that "the resentment of women", it's so true, in household work there is a tinge (and sometimes more), an undercurrent of self-sacrifice. It's personal work, after all, for people who often need more than one can give. And yet, it's personal work, the work at the heart of the universe, the work that takes the most, the work that Seamus shows has gravity, but in it's own peculiar way, elevates. That last line is remarkable - "To work...is to pull your weight and feel exact and equal to it. Feel dragged upon. And buoyant." Words to think on.






 

Thursday 18 May 2017

Consider the Grass Growing

Nicholas Hely Hutchinson

Consider the Grass Growing


Consider the grass growing
As it grew last year and the year before,
Cool about the ankles like summer rivers,
When we walked on a May evening through the meadows
To watch the mare that was going to foal.


Patrick Kavanagh


"Consider", Such a good word to begin a poem with. It makes me chuckle a bit, actually. Kavanagh is getting us to do the work. He's not explaining or summing things up, no, he leaves that to us. What is it about this grass growing? It sounds a bit biblical - that whole Psalm 103 thing, "As for man, his days are as grass...", and yes, he mentions the years past, but at the same time he's talking about the future, about expectations. And where do I find myself in all this? Enjoying the moment. "Cool about the ankles" - that is as true a description as there is. I've felt that. I feel it as I read. 




 

Tuesday 16 May 2017

Spring Morning

Joke Frima

Spring Morning


Where am I going? I don't quite know.
Down to the stream where the king-cups grow-
Up on the hill where the pine-trees blow-
Anywhere, anywhere. I don't know.

Where am I going? The clouds sail by,
Little ones, baby ones, over the sky.
Where am I going? The shadows pass,
Little ones, baby ones, over the grass.

If you were a cloud, and sailed up there,
You'd sail on water as blue as air,
And you'd see me here in the fields and say:
"Doesn't the sky look green today?"

Where am I going? The high rooks call:
"It's awful fun to be born at all."
Where am I going? The ring-doves coo:
"We do have beautiful things to do."

If you were a bird, and lived on high,
You'd lean on the wind when the wind came by,
You'd say to the wind when it took you away:
"That's where I wanted to go today!"

Where am I going? I don't quite know.
What does it matter where people go?
Down to the wood where the blue-bells grow-
Anywhere, anywhere. I don't know.


A. A. Milne

There's a bluebell wood not far from here, just like the ones in England. I've never seen one with my own eyes before, and what a treat for the senses. It made me wonder if there were any poems about bluebells. Not many, but of them I like this one for it's quality of childlike aimlessness and observation of the natural world. Reading as an adult, though, and one with worries and stress, it appeals to my sense of wanting to go somewhere, anywhere, to find a moment of peace and beauty. A bluebell wood would do quite well.



 


Monday 15 May 2017

A Dream of Nature

Stephanie Martin

A Dream of Nature

Birds I saw in bushes made nests.
Even a simple one no man
Could ever make. And when and where
I wondered did the magpie learn
To weave sticks one with another
To secure her nest? Carpenters
Couldn't do anything as good,
No designer make a blueprint
For it either. It astonished
Me even more that many birds
Hid their eggs, carefully concealed,
So that only the parent birds
Themselves could find them. Some I saw
Did their breeding high in the trees
And hatched their young way up above
The ground. Diving birds plumped deep down
In swamps, moorland ponds and reedbeds,
Wherever there was water. 'Dear
God,' I cried, 'What school do all these
Wild things go to, to get such sense?'
And then the peacock; I saw how 
He mated, how roughly the bird
Went about it. I marvelled at 
His splendour along with his crude
Screaming voice. I looked at the sea
And on further to the high stars.
The whole world was full of wonders
Too many to put down now, flowers
In the fields, their dazzling colours,
So many different shades, sprung
From the same earth and grassy fields,
Some bitter to the taste, some sweet.
It seemed all one great miracle
Ranged too wide for me to record
But what struck me and set me back
Was that reason seemed to govern
All creatures and how they acted
Except for man, except mankind.


From Piers Plowman by William Langland
translated by Ronald Tamplin 

It's a wonder to me too. How do they know? How do they do it? Every spring, we could ask the same questions.  

Saturday 13 May 2017

A Tree Frog



A tree frog trilling
softly, the first drop of rain
slips down the new leaves.

Rogetsu

Last week I got the chance (after many years) to listen to the spring frog's evening chorus. One of my favorite sounds in the world - it brought my childhood right back to me. 

 

Wednesday 10 May 2017

A Light Breather

Jiang Debin


A Light Breather

The spirit moves,
Yet stays:
Stirs as a blossom stirs,
Still wet from its bud-sheath,
Slowly unfolding,
Turning in the light with its tendrils;
Plays as a minnow plays,
Tethered to a limp weed, swinging,
Tail around, nosing in and out of the current,
Its shadows loose, a watery finger;
Moves, like the snail,
Still inward,
Taking and embracing its surroundings,
Never wishing itself away,
Unafraid of what it is,
A music in a hood,
A small thing,
Singing.

Theodore Roethke

I hardly know what to say about this one. It says it all, and with a lovely back and forth rhythm just like a water eddy. And the arrangement of the lines, too, seems to echo the idea of something small stretching out a little, moving, testing the space around it. And then that last line, the last word - "singing" - perfect. "Taking and embracing its surroundings, never wishing itself away, unafraid of what it is..." words to hold close.


 

Tuesday 9 May 2017

A Tree Telling of Orpheus

Ivan Shishkin

A Tree Telling Of Orpheus

White dawn. Stillness.      When the rippling began
    I took it for a sea-wind, coming to our valley with rumors
    of salt, of treeless horizons. but the white fog
didn't stir; the leaved of my brothers remained outstretched,
unmoving.

          Yet the rippling drew nearer — and then
my own outermost branches began to tingle, almost as if
fire had been lit below them, too close, and their twig-tips
were drying and curling.
                  Yet I was not afraid, only
                  deeply alert.

I was the first to see him, for I grew
    out on the pasture slope, beyond the forest.
He was a man, it seemed: the two
moving stems, the short trunk, the two
arm-branches, flexible, each with five leafless
                              twigs at their ends,
and the head that's crowned by brown or gold grass,
bearing a face not like the beaked face of a bird,
  more like a flower's.
                    He carried a burden made of
some cut branch bent while it was green,
strands of a vine tight-stretched across it. From this,
when he touched it, and from his voice
which unlike the wind's voice had no need of our
leaves and branches to complete its sound,
                        came the ripple.
But it was now no longer a ripple (he had come near and
stopped in my first shadow) it was a wave that bathed me
    as if rain
          rose from below and around me
    instead of falling.
And what I felt was no longer a dry tingling:
    I seemed to be singing as he sang, I seemed to know
    what the lark knows; all my sap
          was mounting towards the sun that by now
              had risen, the mist was rising, the grass
was drying, yet my roots felt music moisten them
deep under earth.

        He came still closer, leaned on my trunk:
          the bark thrilled like a leaf still-folded.
Music! there was no twig of me not
                        trembling with joy and fear.

Then as he sang
it was no longer sounds only that made the music:
he spoke, and as no tree listens I listened, and language
                    came into my roots
                        out of the earth,
                    into my bark
                        out of the air,
                    into the pores of my greenest shoots
                        gently as dew
and there was no word he sang but I knew its meaning.
He told of journeys,
          of where sun and moon go while we stand in dark,
    of an earth-journey he dreamed he would take some day
deeper than roots…
He told of the dreams of man, wars, passions, griefs,
              and I, a tree, understood words — ah, it seemed
my thick bark would split like a sapling's that
                        grew too fast in the spring
when a late frost wounds it.   
   
                          Fire he sang,
that trees fear, and I, a tree, rejoiced in its flames.
New buds broke forth from me though it was full summer.
    As though his lyre (now I knew its name)
    were both frost and fire, its chord flamed
up to the crown of me.

              I was seed again.
                    I was fern in the swamp.
                        I was coal.

And at the heart of my wood
(so close I was to becoming man or god)
    there was a kind of silence, a kind of sickness,
          something akin to what men call boredom,
                                  something
(the poem descended a scale, a stream over stones)
          that gives to a candle a coldness
              in the midst of its burning, he said.

It was then,
          when in the blaze of his power that
                    reached me and changed me
          I thought I should fall my length,
that the singer began
              to leave me.      Slowly
          moved from my noon shadow
                                  to open light,
words leaping and dancing over his shoulders
back to me
          rivery sweep of lyre-tones becoming
slowly again
          ripple.

And I              in terror
                    but not in doubt of
                                  what I must do
in anguish, in haste,
              wrenched from the earth root after root,
the soil heaving and cracking, the moss tearing asunder —
and behind me the others: my brothers
forgotten since dawn. In the forest
they too had heard,
and were pulling their roots in pain
out of a thousand year's layers of dead leaves,
    rolling the rocks away,
                    breaking themselves
                                      out of
                                  their depths.   
   
  You would have thought we would lose the sound of the lyre,
                    of the singing
so dreadful the storm-sounds were, where there was no storm,
              no wind but the rush of our
          branches moving, our trunks breasting the air.
                    But the music!
                                The music reached us.
Clumsily,
    stumbling over our own roots,
                            rustling our leaves
                                        in answer,
we moved, we followed.

All day we followed, up hill and down.
                              We learned to dance,
for he would stop, where the ground was flat,
                                  and words he said
taught us to leap and to wind in and out
around one another    in figures    the lyre's measure designed.

The singer
          laughed till he wept to see us, he was so glad.
                                        At sunset
we came to this place I stand in, this knoll
with its ancient grove that was bare grass then.
          In the last light of that day his song became
farewell.
          He stilled our longing.
          He sang our sun-dried roots back into earth,
watered them: all-night rain of music so quiet
                                        we could almost
                              not hear it in the
                                  moonless dark.
By dawn he was gone.
                    We have stood here since,
in our new life.
              We have waited.
                        He does not return.
It is said he made his earth-journey, and lost
what he sought.
              It is said they felled him
and cut up his limbs for firewood.
                                  And it is said
his head still sang and was swept out to sea singing.
Perhaps he will not return.
                        But what we have lived
comes back to us.
              We see more.
                        We feel, as our rings increase,
something that lifts our branches, that stretches our furthest
                                        leaf-tips
further.
    The wind, the birds,
                        do not sound poorer but clearer,
recalling our agony, and the way we danced.
The music!

Denise Levertov


Orpheus is a hero of Greek mythology. A legendary musician so gifted it was said he could charm wild animals and make trees dance. This poem turns us into a tree, feeling the mysterious influence and effect of the music. Levertov is so skillful at placing us inside the "mind" of the tree, that it didn't even occur to me until after I'd read it several times that trees don't have ears. (Her development of the tree character is so subtle it deserves some attention.) First the music is a ripple, a vibration, like a sea-wind, that develops into a tingling. The sound-waves seem to be awakening the tree, giving it a sense of deep alertness, and from that point on develops all the human senses - sound, sight, emotions, language, a voice to sing, understanding- the tree is changed. He dances, he sees more, feels more, hears clearer. Now whether she intends it or not, for me Orpheus is like Jesus. This is the effect he has, this is the music I hear, the deep awareness and awakening to things inside and outside and beyond myself. This is joy and gravity at once. Being changed by Him, and learning to pull up roots here in order to dance.