Poem of the week

I bring a different poem to the writing classes each week, not only to inspire but to introduce new poets to the group members.

"... the feeling I have about poem-writing (is) that it is always an exploration, of discovering something I didn't already know.  Who I am shifts from moment to moment, year to year.  What I can perceive does as well.  A new poem peers into mystery, into whatever lies just beyond the edge of knowable ground."

-Jane Hirshfield, poet

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Swallows by Leonora Speyer

They dip their wings in the sunset,
They dash against the air
As if to break themselves upon its stillness:
In every movement, too swift to count,
Is a revelry of indecision,
A furtive delight in trees they do not desire
And in grasses that shall not know their weight.

They hover and lean toward the meadow
With little edged cries;
And then,
As if frightened at the earth’s nearness,
They seek the high austerity of evening sky
And swirl into its depth.
 
~ In the public domain
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The Sound Of It by W.S. Merwin

The rain stopped	
you never hear it stop
and then the dripping from the trees and then
how could anyone hear it not falling
not arriving and then
not arriving
other things must be happening that way
unheard all around us
you never hear the dog stop barking
whether you are listening or not
we hear things start up and go on
calling and shrieking and singing
saying hello saying good-bye but not
stopping
is that the way it is
is there no sound of stopping
and no sound to
the sound of stopping
then no sound
without stopping

~ from Garden Time (Copper Canyon Press 2016)
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Waking by Gwen Benaway

I dream of the old house, 	
dusk on the pines, fireflies glinting
through the low brush, and birds—
I can’t say what kind—calling out,	
the last noise of the day.

it’s late summer in the dream,	
I know by the earth’s heat,	
the banked sunlight diffusing
beneath my feet but faded,
maybe August, frost in the air.

across the dark, the tree line
waits for me, low and steeped
in shadow, a shaded green
by the yard’s end, the footpath
to the river visible but only just.

I think I hear my mother,	
not speaking but somehow a sound
of her in the wind, an echo I
haven’t heard in years but recall
and I’m scared to find her.

I stand at the bottom of the hill,
beneath the house in the yard
and watch for explanations, signs
or omens to arrive, justify dreaming,
but there’s nothing more:

just late summer, my old home,
the land slipping from light,
and my mother, lost to me,
but still singing with the birds,
the last sounds I hear

before waking.

~ from Passage (Kegedonce Press, 2016)
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Sunday Morning Early by David Romtvedt

My daughter and I paddle red kayaks
across the lake. Pulling hard,
we slip easily through the water.
Far from either shore, it hits me
that my daughter is a young woman
and suddenly everything is a metaphor
for how short a time we are granted:

the red boats on the blue-black water,
the russet and gold of late summer’s grasses,
the empty sky. We stop and listen to the stillness.
I say, “It’s Sunday, and here we are
in the church of the out of doors,”
then wish I’d kept quiet. That’s the trick in life—
learning to leave well enough alone.

Our boats drift to where the chirring
of grasshoppers reaches us from the rocky hills.
A clap of thunder. I want to say something truer
than I love you. I want my daughter to know that,
through her, I live a life that was closed to me.
I paddle up, lean out, and touch her hand.
I start to speak then stop.

~ from Dilemmas of the Angels (Louisiana State 
University Press, 2017)
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Measure by Lorna Crozier

The sun leaning south has a slow drawl,	
drawing out the day’s vowels,  
taking longer to say but still saying it.

It’s the end of summer, petals closing up,	
the bones in my wrists the first to feel
the possibility of frost.

What I’ve read and remember pleases me	
but has little use—Solzhenitsyn’s sister
calling cats the only true Christians

or Aldous Huxley, impatient with the coolness	
of Virginia Woolf, her meanness to a friend,
writing in a letter, She’s a jar of ashes.

I wish I’d saved my father’s, sealed some	
in an egg timer and used it as a measure,
following the sun’s slide across the windowsill,

in slow ease into night.  I’m looking more like him,
my face getting thinner, m lips more pinched.
Still, I love the way the sun moves	

around lobelia, anemone, geranium,
words lasting longer on the warmth
and thickness of its tongue.

~ from Whetstone (McClelland and Stewart Ltd, 2005)
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Heredity by Louis Jenkins

I have come to recognize certain genetic traits that have been
handed down to me, patterns of behavior, certain involuntary 
actions.  I can feel them happening, that worried look of my 
mother’s, that almost angry, I-deserve-better-than-this look.
And my father’s cough, the sleeves of his work shirt rolled to
the elbow, a pencil poised motionless above a scrap of paper
lying on the yellow oilcloth that covers the table, next to the
white porcelain salt and pepper shakers with the red metal
tops.  Which means it must be sometime in the 1040’s, the war
still going on.  Neither of them saying a work, as if stunned
there in the dim late night light of the kitchen.  And what am
I doing here?  I should have been in bed hours ago.

~ from Sea Smoke  (Holy Cow! Press 2004)
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Wild Geese Alighting on a Lake by Anne Porter

I watched them
As they neared the lake
They wheeled
In a wide arc
With beating wings
And then
They put their wings to sleep
And glided downward in a drift
Of pure abandonment
Until they touched
The surface of the lake
Composed their wings
And settled
On the rippling water
As though it were a nest.

~ from Living Things (Zoland Books, 2006)
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Hitchhiker by Louis Jenkins

I pick up thistles and burdock, seeds of all sorts, on my pants legs as I walk the fields and ditches. Somewhere, way down the road, some will fall on fertile ground and begin the haphazard garden all over again. I pick up pebbles in my shoe treads and when they fall out they spawn streambeds, glacial eskers, mountain ranges. One day there will be a huge boulder right where your house is now, but it will take awhile.

~ from Sea Smoke, (Holy Cow! Press 2004)

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Excerpts, Concerning the Book That is the Body of the Beloved by Gregory Orr

Two years ago, my father
Died. What love we had
Hidden under misery,
Weighed down with years
Of silence.
 
And now,
Maybe the poem can free
Us, maybe the poem can express
The love and let the rest
Slide to the earth as the snow
Does now, freeing the tree
Of its burden. 

To be alive: not just the carcass
But the spark.
That’s crudely put, but . . .
 
If we’re not supposed to dance,
Why all this music? 

Time to shut up.
Voltaire said the secret
Of being boring
Is to say everything.
 
And yet I held
Back about love
All those years:
Talking about death
Insistently, even
As I was alive;
Talking about loss
As if all was loss,
As if the world
Did not return
Each morning.
As if the beloved
Didn’t long for us.
 
No wonder I go on
So. I go on so
Because of the wonder.

~ from Concerning The Book That Is The Body Of The Beloved (Copper Canyon Press, 2005)
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Marriage Morning by Alfred Lord Tennyson

Light, so low upon earth, 
   You send a flash to the sun. 
Here is the golden close of love, 
   All my wooing is done. 
O all the woods and the meadows, 
   Woods where we hid from the wet, 
Stiles where we stay’d to be kind, 
   Meadows in which we met! 
Light, so low in the vale 
   You flash and lighten afar:
For this is the golden morning of love, 
   And you are his morning star. 
Flash, I am coming, I come, 
   By meadow and stile and wood:
Oh, lighten into my eyes and my heart, 
   Into my heart and my blood! 
Heart, are you great enough 
   For a love that never tires? 
O heart, are you great enough for love? 
   I have heard of thorns and briers. 
Over the thorns and briers,  
   Over the meadows and stiles, 
Over the world to the end of it 
   Flash of a million miles. 

~ This poem is in the public domain
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From Preface to Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman

This is what you shall do: Love the earth and sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to every one that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men, go freely with powerful uneducated persons and with the young and with the mothers of families, read these leaves in the open air every season of every year of your life, re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul; and your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency not only in its words but in the silent lines of its lips and face and between the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body.

~ Preface to Leaves of Grass, Public Domain.

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Excerpt from the blessing 'For Light' by John O'Donohue

In the glare of neon times,
Let our eyes not be worn
By surfaces that shine
With hunger made attractive. 
That our thoughts may be true light,
Finding their way into words
Which have the weight of shadow
To hold the layers of truth. 
That we never place our trust
In minds claimed by empty light,
Where one-sided certainties
Are driven by false desire. 
When we look into the heart,
May our eyes have the kindness
And reverence of candlelight.
That the searching of our minds 
Be equal to the oblique
Crevices and corners where
The mystery continues to dwell,
glimmering in fugitive light. 

~from To Bless The Space Between Us (Harmony, 2008)
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Summer Song by William Carlos Williams

Wanderer moon
smiling a
faintly ironical smile
at this
brilliant, dew-moistened
summer morning,—
a detached
sleepily indifferent
smile, a
wanderer's smile,—
if I should
buy a shirt
your color and
put on a necktie
sky-blue
where would they carry me?

~ from Al Que Quiere! A Book of Poems 
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Marriage Morning by Alfred Lord Tennyson

Light, so low upon earth, 
   You send a flash to the sun. 
Here is the golden close of love, 
   All my wooing is done. 
O all the woods and the meadows, 
   Woods where we hid from the wet, 
Stiles where we stay’d to be kind, 
   Meadows in which we met! 
Light, so low in the vale 
   You flash and lighten afar:
For this is the golden morning of love, 
   And you are his morning star. 
Flash, I am coming, I come, 
   By meadow and stile and wood:
Oh, lighten into my eyes and my heart, 
   Into my heart and my blood! 
Heart, are you great enough 
   For a love that never tires? 
O heart, are you great enough for love? 
   I have heard of thorns and briers. 
Over the thorns and briers,  
   Over the meadows and stiles, 
Over the world to the end of it 
   Flash of a million miles. 

~ This poem is in the public domain
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Wade In The Water by Tracy K. Smith

One of the women greeted me. 
I love you, she said. She didn’t 
Know me, but I believed her,
And a terrible new ache 
Rolled over in my chest, 
Like in a room where the drapes 
Have been swept back. I love you, 
I love you, as she continued 
Down the hall past other strangers,
Each feeling pierced suddenly 
By pillars of heavy light.
I love you, throughout
The performance, in every 
Handclap, every stomp.
I love you in the rusted iron
Chains someone was made
To drag until love let them be
Unclasped and left empty
In the center of the ring. 
I love you in the water
Where they pretended to wade,
Singing that old blood-deep song 
That dragged us to those banks
And cast us in. I love you, 
The angles of it scraping at
Each throat, shouldering past 
The swirling dust motes
In those beams of light
That whatever we now knew
We could let ourselves feel, knew
To climb. O Woods—O Dogs—
O Tree—O Gun—O Girl, run—
O Miraculous Many Gone—
O Lord—O Lord—O Lord—
Is this love the trouble you promised? 

~from The New Yorker, June 5 &12, 2017 issue (book “Wade in the Water” to be published in 2018
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Soothsayer by Connie Bensley

I’m sure you will be very happy with this bra, Madam,	
she said, her manicure seriously red as she tapped the till.
Of course I did not ask her how she knew.

Who is rude enough to challenge the clairvoyant,	
the diagnostician, the prognosticator?
But she was right.  As soon as she folded up		

the lacy garment—its ticket swinging insouciantly—
and handed it across the counter
in its raspberry-pink bag, my spirits rose.

Outside, traffic parted for me like the red Sea:	
the sun appeared and gilded passers-by
who nervously returned y random smiles.

The days, the weeks, wore on in a numinous haze	
of goodwill.  Who knows why?  Be cynical if you must:
I only record the sequence of events.

~ from Choosing to be a Swan (Bloodaxe Books, 1994)
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Things to Think by Robert Bly

Think in ways you’ve never thought before.
If the phone rings, think of it as carrying a message
Larger than anything you’ve ever heard,
Vaster than a hundred lines of Yeats.

Think that someone may bring a bear to your door,
Maybe wounded and deranged; or think that a moose
Has risen out of the lake, and he’s carrying on his antlers,
A child of your own whom you’ve never seen.

When someone knocks on the door, think that he’s about
To give you something large: tell you you’re forgiven,
Or that it’s not necessary to work all the time, or that it’s
Been decided that if you lie down no one will die.

~from Morning Poems (HarperCollins, 1997)
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The Catch by Simon Armitage

Forget 
the long, smouldering 
afternoon. It is 

this moment 
when the ball scoots 
off the edge 

of the bat; upwards, 
backwards, falling 
seemingly 

beyond him 
yet he reaches 
and picks it 

out 
of its loop 
like 

an apple
from a branch, 
the first of the season. 

~from Heaven on Earth, edited by Wendy Cope (Faber and Faber, 2001)
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Intimacy by Nina Cassian

I can be alone,
I know how to be alone.

There is a tacit understanding
between my pencils
and the trees outside;
between the rain
and my luminous hair.

The tea is boiling:
my golden zone,
my pure burning amber.

I can be alone,
I know how to be alone.
By tea-light
I write

(translated from the Romanian by Eva Feller and Nina Cassian)

~from Heaven on Earth, edited by Wendy Cope (Faber and Faber, 2001)
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The Moon Rises Slowly Over the Ocean by Xu De-min

It is time
We stand like children
On the silent beach
And calmly wait for the moon
Nothing has been lost on the moon today
A banana kazoo
Sucked between the lips of night
Is no longer blowing out of tune

Crisscrossed boughs set up an easel
The moon wearing a pure white suncap
Slowly comes over like a shy boy
Holding a transparent nylon net
With which to scavenge the ocean
Of it’s many broken hearts
Bobbing on the sea to the horizon

~ translated by Edward Morin and Dennis Ding, from This Same Sky, Selected by Naomi Shihab Nye (Aladdin Paperbacks, 1996
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