Yui-chan Posted April 11, 2006 Report Posted April 11, 2006 I'm a little late in getting started, but I only found this poem-a-day link yesterday. I thought that the AAA members and other poetry fans here on the site might enjoy the opportunity to read and discuss some 'professional poems' and what makes them great. If they are... Please feel free to comment and discuss in this thread. I will create a index for those who want to skip right to any given day's poem. Thank you, ~Yui-chan April 10, 2006 - A Supermarket in California, Allen Ginsberg April 11, 2006 - Anne Hathaway, Carol Ann Duffy April 12, 2006 - Late Ripeness, Czeslaw Milosz April 13, 2006 - Gamin, Frank O'Hara April 14, 2006 - Wish For a Young Wife, Theodore Roethke April 15, 2006 - There Are Two Worlds, Larry Levis April 16, 2006 - For the Sisters of the Hotel Dieu, A.M. Klein April 17, 2006 - An Offer Received In This Morning's Mail: (On misreading an ad for a set of CDs entitled "Beethoven's Complete Symphonies"), Amy Gerstler April 18, 2006 - The Old Liberators, Robert Hedin April 19, 2006 - The Chores, Frannie Lindsay April 20, 2006 - Tantalus in May, Reginald Shepherd April 21, 2006 - A Sad Child, Margaret Atwood April 22, 2006 - Wild Geese, Mary Oliver April 23, 2006 - Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note, Amiri Baraka April 24, 2006 - Autumn, Rainer Maria Rilke April 25, 2006 - The Quiet World, Jeffrey McDaniel April 26, 2006 - since feeling is first, e.e. cummings April 27, 2006 - Crusoe in England, Elizabeth Bishop April 28, 2006 - Dream Song 145, John Berryman April 29, 2006 - Fever 103º, Sylvie Plath April 30, 2006 - Preludes, T.S Eliot
Yui-chan Posted April 11, 2006 Author Report Posted April 11, 2006 April 10, 2006. A Supermarket in California Allen Ginsberg What thoughts I have of you tonight, Walt Whitman, for I walked down the sidestreets under the trees with a headache self-conscious looking at the full moon. In my hungry fatigue, and shopping for images, I went into the neon fruit supermarket, dreaming of your enumerations! What peaches and what penumbras! Whole families shopping at night! Aisles full of husbands! Wives in the avocados, babies in the tomatoes!--and you, Garcia Lorca, what were you doing down by the watermelons? I saw you, Walt Whitman, childless, lonely old grubber, poking among the meats in the refrigerator and eyeing the grocery boys. I heard you asking questions of each: Who killed the pork chops? What price bananas? Are you my Angel? I wandered in and out of the brilliant stacks of cans following you, and followed in my imagination by the store detective. We strode down the open corridors together in our solitary fancy tasting artichokes, possessing every frozen delicacy, and never passing the cashier. Where are we going, Walt Whitman? The doors close in an hour. Which way does your beard point tonight? (I touch your book and dream of our odyssey in the supermarket and feel absurd.) Will we walk all night through solitary streets? The trees add shade to shade, lights out in the houses, we'll both be lonely. Will we stroll dreaming of the lost America of love past blue automobiles in driveways, home to our silent cottage? Ah, dear father, graybeard, lonely old courage-teacher, what America did you have when Charon quit poling his ferry and you got out on a smoking bank and stood watching the boat disappear on the black waters of Lethe? [This is the first Ginsberg poem I ever read, and is still one of my all-time favorites. There are a lot of similarities between Ginsberg and Walt Whitman, maybe the most famous American poet, who wrote a hundred years earlier. Both wrote poetry for and about ordinary people, used a style that's almost conversational, and were gay. Ginsberg teases out the similarities here, especially the loneliness of being gay in America: "through solitary streets ... home to our silent cottage." I adore the strange dreaminess of this, and the vivid language and images. What peaches and what penumbras!]* * Commentary is by the Yahoo user who created and chose these poems. I wish I could say I have some idea of who she is, but I honestly don't. Contact me if you're interested in some links that can give you more information about her or her Yahoo newsgroup.
Yui-chan Posted April 12, 2006 Author Report Posted April 12, 2006 April 11, 2006 Anne Hathaway Carol Ann Duffy 'Item I gyve unto my wife my second best bed …' (from Shakespeare's will) The bed we loved in was a spinning world of forests, castles, torchlight, clifftops, seas where we would dive for pearls. My lover's words were shooting stars which fell to earth as kisses on these lips; my body now a softer rhyme to his, now echo, assonance; his touch a verb dancing in the centre of a noun. Some nights, I dreamed he'd written me, the bed a page beneath his writer's hands. Romance and drama played by touch, by scent, by taste. In the other bed, the best, our guests dozed on, dribbling their prose. My living laughing love - I hold him in the casket of my widow's head as he held me upon that next best bed. [Anne Hathaway was Shakespeare's wife so this is, appropriately enough, a Shakespearean sonnet, a form I've always loved because of the punch of that last rhyming couplet. I really like the creativity in building a love poem like this out of that line from Shakespeare's will, the link between sex and writing, this idealized but still lovely look at their relationship. The way it's responding to and referencing all of his work -- the forests, castles, torchlight, clifftops, seas. In her book, The World's Wife, Carol Ann Duffy has written a whole series of poems by the wives of famous men, some of which are hilarious. I recommend Mrs. Darwin, which you can read here: http://community.livejournal.com/greatpoet...html?mode=reply ] A YEAR AGO TODAY: Sleep Positions, Lola Haskins -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/11 (one of my absolute favorites!)
Yui-chan Posted April 12, 2006 Author Report Posted April 12, 2006 April 12, 2006 Late Ripeness Czeslaw Milosz Not soon, as late as the approach of my ninetieth year, I felt a door opening in me and I entered the clarity of early morning. One after another my former lives were departing, like ships, together with their sorrow. And the countries, cities, gardens, the bays of seas assigned to my brush came closer, ready now to be described better than they were before. I was not separated from people, grief and pity joined us. We forget - I kept saying - that we are all children of the King. For where we come from there is no division into Yes and No, into is, was, and will be. We were miserable, we used no more than a hundredth part of the gift we received for our long journey. Moments from yesterday and from centuries ago - a sword blow, the painting of eyelashes before a mirror of polished metal, a lethal musket shot, a caravel staving its hull against a reef - they dwell in us, waiting for a fulfillment. I knew, always, that I would be a worker in the vineyard, as are all men and women living at the same time, whether they are aware of it or not. (translated by Robert Hass) [i feel like there's something kind of lovely that happens among some older poets -- a calmness and grace in the face of death, a focus on religion. It shows up in Roethke's famous villanelle, "The Waking," and T.S. Eliot's "Four Quartets" and here. My favorite line is: "We forget - I kept saying - that we are all children of the King." It's so dreamlike and strangely comforting. Then again, in his poem "Conversation with Jeanne," Milosz says, "I don't pretend to the dignity of a wise old age." [ http://www.ibiblio.org/ipa/poems/milosz/a_...with_jeanne.php ] So maybe nobody really knows what's going on. Czeslaw Milosz was born in Poland in 1911 and was active in the anti-Nazi movement. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1980.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: A Martian Sends A Postcard Home, Craig Raine - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/12
Yui-chan Posted April 14, 2006 Author Report Posted April 14, 2006 April 13, 2006 Gamin Frank O'Hara All the roofs are wet and underneath smoke that piles softly in streets, tongues are on top of each other mulling over the night. We lay against each other like banks of violets while the slate slips off the roof into the garden of the old lady next door. She is my enemy. She hates cats airplanes and my self as if we were memories of war. Bah! When you are close I thumb my nose at her and laugh. [Last year I posted a very energetic city poem by O'Hara (Steps: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/5 ), and this is kind of its inverse; quiet and indrawn and happily content. I'm in love with the line "while the slate slips" rolling around my mouth -- say it out loud to yourself. So good!] A YEAR AGO TODAY: [this is what you love: more people. you remember], D.A. Powell -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/13
Yui-chan Posted April 14, 2006 Author Report Posted April 14, 2006 April 14, 2006 Wish For a Young Wife Theodore Roethke My lizard, my lively writher, May your limbs never wither, May the eyes in your face Survive the green ice Of envy's mean gaze; May you live out your life Without hate, without grief, And your hair ever blaze, In the sun, in the sun, When I am undone, When I am no one. [The rhythm of those last three lines is wonderful, and the whole thing is so wistful. I like the idea of this addressed to a child, as well. It reminds me of Marilynne Robinson's recent novel Gilead -- which is absolutely lovely.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: The Benjamin Franklin of Monogamy, Jeffrey McDaniel -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/14
reverie Posted April 17, 2006 Report Posted April 17, 2006 (edited) Ginsberg and Whitman were hard to digest for me. Their list poem style (Howl and Leaves of Grass) just goes on and on and on and on and on... If whitman and ginsberg had a duel, Whitman would win hands down. Hmm, Beatnick Chonicler vs Trancendental Mystic. Yean, Whitman wins hands down. For me Howl expressed the frustration of a generation. Railing against the hypocracy and choas of the world that they had inherated. While on the other hand Leaves embraced the chaos of society and tried to show the connectiveness of everything. Mystism meets the American Dream... Sure, the hypocrasy was highlighted too (treaments on slavery, plight of the working class / native americans etc.), but this work strove to acknowledge and unite... Too bad he went and got himself an Omi-potent God complex in the process. Just goes with the territory, though... Mystisms a tricky path, even more so if you walk it alone. rev... Edited April 17, 2006 by reverie
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2006 Author Report Posted April 17, 2006 April 15, 2006 There Are Two Worlds Larry Levis Perhaps the ankle of a horse is holy. Crossing the Mississippi at dusk, Clemens thought Of a sequel in which Huck Finn, in old age, became A hermit, & insane. And never wrote it. And perhaps all that he left out is holy. The river, anyway, became a sacrament when He spoke of it, even though The last ten chapters were a failure he devised To please America, & make his lady Happy: to buy her silk, furs, & jewels with Hues no one in Hannibal had ever seen. There, above the river, if The pattern of the stars is a blueprint for a heaven Left unfinished, I also believe the ankle of a horse, In the seventh furlong, is as delicate as the fine lace Of faith, & therefore holy. I think it was only Twain's cynicism, the smell of a river Lingering in his nostrils forever, that kept His humor alive to the end. I don't know how he managed it. I used to make love to a woman, who, When I left, would kiss the door she held open for me, As if instead of me, as if she already missed me. I would stand there in the cold air, breathing it, Amused by her charm, which was, like the scent of a river, Provocative, the dusk & first lights along the shore. Should I say my soul went mad for a year, & Could not sleep? To whom should I say so? She was gentle, & intended no harm. If the ankle of a horse is holy, & if it fails In the stretch & the horse goes down, & The jockey in the bright shout of his silks Is pitched headlong onto The track, & maimed, & if later, the horse is Destroyed, & all that is holy Is also destroyed: hundreds of bones & muscles that Tried their best to be pure flight, a lyric Made flesh, then I would like to go home, please. Even though I betrayed it, & left, even though I might be, at such a time as I am permitted To go back to my wife, my son -- no one, or No more than a stone in a pasture full Of stones, full of the indifferent grasses, (& Huck Finn insane by then & living alone) It will be, it might be still, A place where what can only remain holy grazes, & Where men might, also, approach with soft halters, And, having no alternative, lead that fast world Home -- though it is only to the closed dark of stalls, And though the men walk ahead of the horses slightly Afraid, & at times in awe of their Quickness, & how they have nothing to lose, especially Now, when the first stars appear slowly enough To be counted, & the breath of horses makes white signatures On the air: Last Button, No Kidding, Brief Affair -- And the air is colder. [On this lovely Saturday, one of my all-time favorite poems. Larry Levis is very good at weaving together a bunch of disparate elements into something complex and lovely and distinct: here it's the idea of holiness, and Huckleberry Finn (from which Hemingway says all modern American literature comes), and the decay or dissolution of beautiful things, and the river, and the South, and horses, and sorrow, and contentment. .... or such is my guess anyway! I can read this poem over and over and I'm still not sure I know what it's getting at, but I think that's probably what makes it great.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: America, Allen Ginsberg -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/15
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2006 Author Report Posted April 17, 2006 April 16, 2006 For the Sisters of the Hotel Dieu A.M. Klein In pairs, as if to illustrate their sisterhood, the sisters pace the hospital garden walks. In their robes black and white immaculate hoods they are like birds, the safe domestic fowl of the House of God. O biblic birds, who fluttered to me in my childhood illnesses - me little, afraid, ill, not of your race, - the cool wing for my fever, the hovering solace, the sense of angels- be thanked, O plumage of paradise, be praised. [Awww, nuns.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: Other Lives And Dimensions And Finally A Love Poem, Bob Hicok -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/16
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2006 Author Report Posted April 17, 2006 April 17, 2006 An Offer Received In This Morning's Mail: (On misreading an ad for a set of CDs entitled "Beethoven's Complete Symphonies") Amy Gerstler The Musical Heritage Society invites you to accept Beethoven's Complete Sympathies. A full $80.00 value, yours for $49.95. The brooding composer of "Ode to Joy" now delighting audiences in paradise nightly knows your sorrows. Just look at his furrowed brow, his thin lipped grimace. Your sweaty 2 am writhings have touched his great teutonic heart. Peering invisibly over your shoulder he reads those poems you scribble on memo pads at the office, containing lines like o lethal blossom, I am your marionette forever, and a compassionate smile trembles at the corners of his formerly stern mouth. (He'd be thrilled to set your poems to music.) This immortal master, gathered to the bosom of his ancestors over a century ago, has not forgotten those left behind to endure gridlock and mind-ache, wearily crosshatching the earth's surface with our miseries, or belching complaints into grimy skies, further besmirching the firmament. But just how relevant is Beethoven these days, you may ask. Wouldn't the sympathies of a modern composer provide a more up-to-date form of solace? Well, process this info-byte 21st century skeptic. A single lock of Beethoven's hair fetched over $7,000 last week at auction. The hairs were then divided into lots of two or three and resold at astronomical prices. That's how significant he remains today. Beethoven the great-hearted, who used to sign his letters ever thine, the unhappiest of men, wants you to know how deeply sorry he is that you're having such a rough time. Prone to illness, self-criticism and squandered affections - Ludwig (he'd like you to call him that, if you'd do him the honor), son of a drunk and a depressive, was beaten, cheated, and eventually went stone deaf. He too had to content himself with clutching his beloved's toothmarked yellow pencils (as the tortured scrawls in his notebooks show) to sketch out symphonies, concerti, chamber music, etcetera-works that still brim, as does your disconsolate soul, with unquenched fire and brilliance. Give Beethoven a chance to show how much he cares. Easy financing available. And remember: a century in heaven has not calmed the maestro's celebrated temper, so act now. For god's sake don't make him wait. [Ha! I adore when someone can take a silly idea and run with it. Talk about commitment to the joke, and it ends up being kind of strangely lovely because of it.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: The Last Poem In The World, Hayden Carruth -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/17
Sweetcherrie Posted April 17, 2006 Report Posted April 17, 2006 *giggles* Been reading these from the start already, and wanted to thank you for posting them here. I really liked that last one, excellent example of how far you can take a misprint *grins* Thanks Yui
Akallabeth Posted April 18, 2006 Report Posted April 18, 2006 Really liked this last one... Just finished with learning of Beethoven & his life in Music Appreciation today. It's odd seeing much of what I learned in class transferred to an interesting poetic form. As well as offering some wonderful CDs at a reduced price.
Yui-chan Posted April 18, 2006 Author Report Posted April 18, 2006 I'm really glad y'all are enjoying these. It's really interesting to me as a poetry-illiterate type of person to see what the broader community views as 'good poems'. I think I would probably have scoffed at some of these, but the group coordinator's commentary has helped me understand why they appeal to others. I'm kind of sad that Poetry Month is almost over. Anyway, on to the next! ~Yui
Yui-chan Posted April 18, 2006 Author Report Posted April 18, 2006 April 18, 2006 The Old Liberators Robert Hedin Of all the people in the mornings at the mall, It's the old liberators I like best, Those veterans of the Bulge, Anzio, or Monte Cassino I see lost in Automotive or back in Home Repair, Bored among the paints and power tools. Or the really old ones, the ones who are going fast, Who keep dozing off in the little orchards Of shade under the distant skylights. All around, from one bright rack to another, Their wives stride big as generals, Their handbags bulging like ripe fruit. They are almost all gone now, And with them they are taking the flak And fire storms, the names of the old bombing runs. Each day a little more of their memory goes out, Darkens the way a house darkens, Its rooms quietly filling with evening, Until nothing but the wind lifts the lace curtains, The wind bearing through the empty rooms The rich far off scent of gardens Where just now, this morning, Light is falling on the wild philodendrons. [Like yesterday's poem, this finds the poetic in something kind of unusual -- who knew old people at the mall could come off seeming lovely? This poem makes me so sad: "They are almost all gone now." It's just what T.S. Eliot is getting at in The Waste Land -- time moving forward is awful because you're always losing something. Here, it's the veterans, and all their memories that soon won't exist at all.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: Morning Song, Sylvia Plath -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/18
Sweetcherrie Posted April 18, 2006 Report Posted April 18, 2006 I really like this one. It gives me the shivers as it forces me to stand still with the thought that nothing is forever. Nothing will stay the way it is right now, and this can sometimes make me sad. At the same time, each step forward is a good one, since it means you live in the now. Tomorrow will never exist, and yesterday is dead already, so best live with the now since it's the only time we have. Though....wouldn't it be nice if we could capture certain moments in a jar, and relive them when needed?
Yui-chan Posted April 20, 2006 Author Report Posted April 20, 2006 April 19, 2005 The Chores Frannie Lindsay My father sets the box of newborn kittens into the pit of soil. I've done a good job with his shovel. He pats my bottom. I've tucked the right bullets into the pouch of my overalls. He lets me load the revolver, closes his hands around mine from behind. The gravel and silo and sky run together with mewing. Eggs over easy sputter and clap from the kitchen. I push the loose hair from my face, aim down. The morning air is slow with green flies. The straps of my first bra pinch my shoulders. I am his good, good daughter. Now, he says, and I don't waste a shot. [What really gets me about this poem isn't the shock of the subject, but the relationship between father and daughter; how precisely it's placed in time ("The straps of my first bra") and the weight of something like longing in the line "I am his / good, good daughter."] A YEAR AGO TODAY: Direct Address, Joan Larkin -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/19
Mira Posted April 20, 2006 Report Posted April 20, 2006 April 10, 2006. A Supermarket in California Allen Ginsberg What thoughts I have of you tonight, Walt Whitman, for I walked down the sidestreets under the trees with a headache self-conscious looking at the full moon. In my hungry fatigue, and shopping for images, I went into the neon fruit supermarket, dreaming of your enumerations! What peaches and what penumbras! Whole families shopping at night! Aisles full of husbands! Wives in the avocados, babies in the tomatoes!--and you, Garcia Lorca, what were you doing down by the watermelons? I saw you, Walt Whitman, childless, lonely old grubber, poking among the meats in the refrigerator and eyeing the grocery boys. I heard you asking questions of each: Who killed the pork chops? What price bananas? Are you my Angel? I wandered in and out of the brilliant stacks of cans following you, and followed in my imagination by the store detective. We strode down the open corridors together in our solitary fancy tasting artichokes, possessing every frozen delicacy, and never passing the cashier. Where are we going, Walt Whitman? The doors close in an hour. Which way does your beard point tonight? (I touch your book and dream of our odyssey in the supermarket and feel absurd.) Will we walk all night through solitary streets? The trees add shade to shade, lights out in the houses, we'll both be lonely. Will we stroll dreaming of the lost America of love past blue automobiles in driveways, home to our silent cottage? Ah, dear father, graybeard, lonely old courage-teacher, what America did you have when Charon quit poling his ferry and you got out on a smoking bank and stood watching the boat disappear on the black waters of Lethe? [This is the first Ginsberg poem I ever read, and is still one of my all-time favorites. There are a lot of similarities between Ginsberg and Walt Whitman, maybe the most famous American poet, who wrote a hundred years earlier. Both wrote poetry for and about ordinary people, used a style that's almost conversational, and were gay. Ginsberg teases out the similarities here, especially the loneliness of being gay in America: "through solitary streets ... home to our silent cottage." I adore the strange dreaminess of this, and the vivid language and images. What peaches and what penumbras!]* * Commentary is by the Yahoo user who created and chose these poems. I wish I could say I have some idea of who she is, but I honestly don't. Contact me if you're interested in some links that can give you more information about her or her Yahoo newsgroup. I love Ginsberg and Whitman, so this poem is wonderful. I do not however agree with some of the comments made by the Yahoo Reviewer.
Yui-chan Posted April 20, 2006 Author Report Posted April 20, 2006 April 20, 2006 Tantalus in May Reginald Shepherd When I look down, I see the season's blinding flowers, the usual mesmerizing and repellent artifacts: the frat boy who turns too sharply from my stare, a cardinal capturing vision in a lilac bush on my walk home. I'm left to long even for simple dangers. From the waist up it's still winter, I left world behind a long time ago; waist down it's catching up, a woodpecker out my window is mining grubs from some nameless tree squirrels scramble over. When I turn back it's gone, I hadn't realized this had gone so far. (Everywhere I look it's suddenly spring. No one asked if I would like to open drastically. Look up. It's gone.) Everywhere fruits dangle I can't taste, their branches insurmountable, my tongue burnt by frost. White boys, white flowers, and foul-mouthed jays, days made of sky-blue boredoms and everything is seen much too clearly: the utterance itself is adoration, kissing stolid air. I hate every lovely thing about them. [This is a poem about being an outsider -- Reginald Shepherd is both black and gay -- about observing and wanting and still being on the edges of things. It's also about contrasts: spring and winter, classic mythology (Tantalus was sentenced to eternal hunger and thirst by the Greek gods) and frat boys, being on the periphery versus being surrounded by sensations, desire and hate.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: September Song, Geoffrey Hill -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/20
Akallabeth Posted April 22, 2006 Report Posted April 22, 2006 *returns to read poems, and pauses for a long while on "The Old Liberators" by Robert Hedin" Quite enjoyable, and quite sad. I came into this poem knowing some about WWII, and knowing a few veterans of WWII. From my perspective, it is interesting how the writer describes the men, simply watching life go by, and having memories vanish as time takes its toll. From my perspective, WWII was one of very few undeniably "just" wars in the US's history. Though war isn't something to rejoice in, it is sometimes necessary, and it is sad to see these men who fought for the freedom and lives of others pass away without much recognition for what they did. Guess I just like sad or depressing poems.
Ayshela Posted April 22, 2006 Report Posted April 22, 2006 many thanks for posting these, Yui! I've enjoyed reading them, though I still think my favourite is "An Offer Received In This Morning's Mail"... =)
Yui-chan Posted April 24, 2006 Author Report Posted April 24, 2006 I'm glad everyone is finding these worth reading. Here's the catch-up group from the weekend... April 21, 2006 A Sad Child Margaret Atwood You're sad because you're sad. It's psychic. It's the age. It's chemical. Go see a shrink or take a pill, or hug your sadness like an eyeless doll you need to sleep. Well, all children are sad but some get over it. Count your blessings. Better than that, buy a hat. Buy a coat or pet. Take up dancing to forget. Forget what? Your sadness, your shadow, whatever it was that was done to you the day of the lawn party when you came inside flushed with the sun, your mouth sulky with sugar, in your new dress with the ribbon and the ice-cream smear, and said to yourself in the bathroom, I am not the favourite child. My darling, when it comes right down to it and the light fails and the fog rolls in and you're trapped in your overturned body under a blanket or burning car, and the red flame is seeping out of you and igniting the tarmac beside your head or else the floor, or else the pillow, none of us is; or else we all are. [i love the way Atwood contrasts short, staccato statements with longer sentences in this poem. This is so pretty and sad.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: The Crunch, Charles Bukowski -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/21
Yui-chan Posted April 24, 2006 Author Report Posted April 24, 2006 April 22, 2006 Wild Geese Mary Oliver You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves. Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine. Meanwhile the world goes on. Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain are moving across the landscapes, over the prairies and the deep trees, the mountains and the rivers. Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air, are heading home again. Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, the world offers itself to your imagination, calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting -- over and over announcing your place in the family of things. [Happy Earth Day!] A YEAR AGO TODAY: A Brief for the Defense, Jack Gilbert -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/22
Yui-chan Posted April 24, 2006 Author Report Posted April 24, 2006 April 23, 2006 Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note Amiri Baraka Lately, I've become accustomed to the way The ground opens up and envelopes me Each time I go out to walk the dog. Or the broad edged silly music the wind Makes when I run for a bus... Things have come to that. And now, each night I count the stars. And each night I get the same number. And when they will not come to be counted, I count the holes they leave. Nobody sings anymore. And then last night I tiptoed up To my daughter's room and heard her Talking to someone, and when I opened The door, there was no one there... Only she on her knees, peeking into Her own clasped hands [The decision about whether or not to post this threw me for kind of a philosophical loop. The poet, Amiri Baraka (born LeRoi Jones), has a lot of controversial and unpleasant political and racial beliefs. It's always a tough question: should you separate the artist from your appreciation of the art? Can you? Nevertheless I really like this poem. It reminds me of a lot of J.D. Salinger's work (although I really don't think that's its intention), in how it uses ordinary everyday images, and the way small children act, to talk indirectly about what a difficult thing life is. And not accepting the status quo is, I think, a good subject for poetry, no matter what the motivation.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: Holy Sonnet XIV, John Donne -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/23
Yui-chan Posted April 25, 2006 Author Report Posted April 25, 2006 24 April, 2006 Autumn Rainer Maria Rilke; translated by Robert Bly The leaves are falling, falling as if from far up, as if orchards were dying high in space. Each leaf falls as if it were motioning "no." And tonight the heavy earth is falling away from all other stars in the loneliness. We're all falling. This hand here is falling. And look at the other one. It's in them all. And yet there is Someone, whose hands infinitely calm, hold up all this falling. [in contrast to yesterday's poem -- the weight of existence, life's difficulty met by God's presence, rather than absence. I love how gentle Rilke's wording is, and the repetition of "falling," how it works on both the large and small scale, the heavy earth, and this hand.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: On Turning Ten, Billy Collins -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/24
Yui-chan Posted April 26, 2006 Author Report Posted April 26, 2006 25 April, 2006 The Quiet World Jeffrey McDaniel In an effort to get people to look into each other's eyes more, the government has decided to allot each person exactly one hundred and sixty-seven words, per day. When the phone rings, I put it to my ear without saying hello. In the restaurant I point at chicken noodle soup. I am adjusting well to the new way. Late at night, I call my long- distance lover and proudly say: I only used fifty-nine today. I saved the rest for you. When she doesn't respond, I know she's used up all her words, so I slowly whisper I love you, thirty-two and a third times. After that, we just sit on the line and listen to each other breathe. [i love that with such a silly idea, and such simple language, Jeffrey McDaniel can make a poem that's so strangely memorable and tender.] A YEAR AGO TODAY: Man and Wife, Robert Lowell -- http://groups.yahoo.com/group/april_is/message/25
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