Jozsef Koszta |
We are
Sitting On a High Green Hill
and how we got here I cannot tell;
I have
a basket and a little flute
which I
play to coax the flowers out;
we call
each other by quiet secret names
and our
clothes are poor but our hair is tame
- we
are neither bad nor good
and
below us is a dark green wood.
we dream of the big world we cannot enter
and we
sit till we silently turn into winter;
the
fruit is all gone and our shoes are thin;
by
night we lie down to let the darkness in
- it is
only by night that I cannot bear
the
cold, or the tired clothes we wear.
we dream of the big world we cannot enter
and we
have no money and we turn into winter;
when
the next spring comes we will melt until
we run like rivers down the high green hill.
Gwendolyn MacEwan
This poem draws me in, and I
don’t know why. I have felt this way, the sense of having been enchanted, like being
under a spell that immobilizes me. Not knowing why I am frozen in place,
longing to be part of the “big world”, but somehow not having the ability to
enter in or join it. This poem makes me think of a tree, too. It’s as if the
speaker is both a person and a part of nature. Like a tree is rooted in one
place, and the seasons change around it and change it as well – the freezing
and melting (which makes me think of water, so when immobile she is like a
tree, when melted, like water she can run anywhere). I don’t know what this poem means, but the
questions and images it weaves together feel deeply personal to me. This again
is a beautiful mystery – a stranger writes a poem that says what she means, I
read it, and recognize something of myself. Maybe people are truly like trees,
our roots running underground meet and touch and connect and spark like
synapses. Maybe poetry simply follows those sparks.
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