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
So I Can Sleep by Jonathan Byrd
I like poets who swear
less is more
earthy abbreviations of long histories
with parents
with the world
with God dammit
I write things down so I can say them again
I like poets who obviously wash dishes
the sound of service in service to words
checking both sides of a sound
for anything that might send it back into the water
you write things down so you never have to say them again
I like poets who write short books so I can sleep
~ from You’ve Changed (Mezcalita Press, 2017)Untitled by James Baldwin
Lord,
when you send the rain,
think about it, please,
a little?
Do
not get carried away
by the sound of falling water,
the marvelous light
on the falling water.
I
am beneath that water.
It falls with great force
and the light
Blinds
me to the light.
~ from Jimmy’s Blues and Other Poems (Beacon Press, 2014)Song by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Stay, stay at home, my heart, and rest;
Home-keeping hearts are happiest,
For those that wander they know not where
Are full of trouble and full of care;
To stay at home is best.
Weary and homesick and distressed,
They wander east, they wander west,
And are baffled and beaten and blown about
By the winds of the wilderness of doubt;
To stay at home is best.
Then stay at home, my heart, and rest;
The bird is safest in its nest;
O’er all that flutter their wings and fly
A hawk is hovering in the sky;
To stay at home is best.
~ Public domainOne String by Mark Nepo
I am so busy at times
trying to make it all
worthwhile, that I am
stunned at how easily the
whole of life speaks to me,
when music I’ve never heard
or a truth I never understood
plucks the one string I carry
deep within.
I only want that string pluck-
ed and yet, it stays in a place
only suffering or surrender
can open.
Still, violins in minor keys
make me swallow my fear
and herons flying into
the end of a long day
make me wish I’d led
a more peaceful life.
~ from Reduced to Joy (Viva Editions 2013)A Field Can Bloom by Rumi
Talking can be sweet. A field can bloom in your
eyes when sharing words with the right person.
An invisible effulgence wafts out from a heart
that is happy. That is an oxygen to us.
In some cities, smoke stacks pollute the air and
harm the lungs of many creatures.
A good song fills our chests too, but can have
the opposite effect—everything it touches
may be better of.
There is a governor of every region of space,
a divine agent; he or she may remain hidden,
but their business is your soul, as it is mine.
Words can fertilize space now and then; don’t
deny yourself becoming enriched.
Find some ears that love the touch of your
sounds, and you theirs.
~ from The Purity of Desire, 100 Poems of Rumi, translated by Daniel Ladinsky with Nancy Owen Barton (Penguin Books, 2012)The Three Oddest Words by Wislawa Szymborska
When I pronounce the word Future,
the first syllable already belongs to the past.
When I pronounce the word Silence,
I destroy it.
When I pronounce the word Nothing,
I make something no non-being can hold.
~Translated by S. Baranczak & C. Cavanagh
Copyright © Wislawa Szymborska, S. Baranczak & C. CavanaghI Have Thoughts that Are Fed by the Sun by William Wordsworth
I have thoughts that are fed by the sun:
The things which I see
Are welcome to me,
Welcome every one –
I do not wish to lie
Dead, dead,
Dead, without any company.
Here alone on my bed
With thoughts that are fed by the sun,
And hopes that are welcome every one,
Happy am I.
Oh life there is about thee
A deep delicious peace;
I would not be without thee,
Stay, oh stay!
Yet be thou ever as now –
Sweetness and breath, with the quiet of death –
Be but thou ever as now,
Peace, peace, peace.
~Public Domain
My Great-Grandmother’s Bible by Spencer Reece
Faux-leather bound and thick as an onion, it flakes —
an heirloom from Iowa my dead often read.
I open the black flap to speak the spakes
and quickly lose track of who wed, who bred.
She taped our family register as it tore,
her hand stuttering like a sewing machine,
darning the blanks with farmers gone before —
Inez, Alvah, Delbert, Ermadean.
Our undistinguished line she pressed in the heft
between the testaments, with spaces to spare,
and one stillborn’s name, smudged; her fingers left
a mounting watchfulness, a quiet repair —
when I saw the AIDS quilt, spread out in acres,
it was stitched with similar scripts by similar makers.
~ from The Road to Emmaus (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2014)Post-postscript: Afterwards by Degan Davis
Death visits you
in the face of your father.
He calls you
to his curious room
and reaches out a hand.
He has called you for a reason
and you want to cry, want to see
what the reason is.
*
In the long afterward
the dead have obligations.
You see them less and less,
like your very first friend,
like your parents in the years after leaving home.
*
Dreams are the borrowed eyes of the dead.
They come down to you
in old poses, faces resplendent:
you dream, and dream and dream
until they are certain you see.
*
The dead are like the soul
of a man while he’s singing.
They are clear escaping
nights, wandering and cool.
They are not breath; they have given that up.
Not breath. But everything else.
~ from What Kind of Man Are You (Brick Books, 2018)You Must Never Sleep Under a Magnolia by Alice Oswald
when the tree begins to flower
like a glimpse of
Flesh
when the flower begins to smell
as if its roots have reached
the layer of
Thirst upon the
unsealed jar of
Joy
Alice, you should
never sleep under
so much pure pale
so many shriek-mouthed blooms
as if Patience
had run out of
Patience
~from Falling Awake (W.W. Norton & Company, 2016)It Goes Away by Linda Gregg
I give everything away and it goes way,
into the dusty air,
onto the face of the water
that goes away beyond our seeing.
I give everything away
that has been given to me:
the voices of children under clouds,
the men in the parks at the chess tables,
the women entering and leaving bakeries.
God who came here by rock, by tree, by bird.
All things silent in my seeing.
All things believable in their leaving.
Everything I have I give away
and it goes away.
~from All of It Singing (Graywolf Press, 2008)Return to Wonder by Shauna Singh Baldwin
In spring
I return to wonder
as a camel calls upon
water from its hump,
I return to wonder
carving it
from emaciated air
inducing it—
not from the
rubbing of genie lamps,
the recitation of wishes,
puffs of smoke,
the palming of cards,
but from irises
pushing up in their patch,
bursting through soil,
valiant purple.
I return to wonder
snatching it
from the press of should-dos
distilling it
from the tug
of schedule and event
to my involuntary present.
Without wonder
I might bear winter
in me always
Then
there might be
nothing to admire
beyond my own being.
So in spring,
I return to wonder.
~ from Red Silk, An Anthology of South Asian
Canadian Women Poets (Mansfield Press, 2004)Saturday At The Canal by Gary Soto
I was hoping to be happy by seventeen.
School was a sharp check mark in the roll book,
An obnoxious tuba playing at noon because our team
Was going to win at night. The teachers were
Too close to dying to understand. The hallways
Stank of poor grades and unwashed hair. Thus,
A friend and I sat watching the water on Saturday,
Neither of us talking much, just warming ourselves
By hurling large rocks at the dusty ground
And feeling awful because San Francisco was a postcard
On a bedroom wall. We wanted to go there,
Hitchhike under the last migrating birds
And be with people who knew more than three chords
On a guitar. We didn't drink or smoke,
But our hair was shoulder length, wild when
The wind picked up and the shadows of
This loneliness gripped loose dirt. By bus or car,
By the sway of train over a long bridge,
We wanted to get out. The years froze
As we sat on the bank. Our eyes followed the water,
White-tipped but dark underneath, racing out of town.
~from Poetry 180, Selected by Billy Collins (Random House, 2003)April in Maine by May Sarton
The days are cold and brown,
Brown fields, no sign of green,
Brown twigs, not even swelling,
And dirty snow in the woods.
But as the dark flows in
The tree frogs begin
Their shrill sweet singing,
And we lie on our beds
Through the ecstatic night,
Wide awake, cracked open.
There will be no going back.
~ from Collected Poems, 1930-1993 (W.W. Norton
& Company, 1993)Things by Lisel Mueller
What happened is, we grew lonely
living among the things,
so we gave the clock a face,
the chair a back,
the table four stout legs
which will never suffer fatigue.
We fitted our shoes with tongues
as smooth as our own
and hung tongues inside bells
so we could listen
to their emotional language,
and because we loved graceful profiles
the pitcher received a lip,
the bottle a long, slender neck.
Even what was beyond us
was recast in our image;
we gave the country a heart,
the storm an eye,
the cave a mouth
so we could pass into safety.
~ from Alive Together (Louisiana State University Press, 1996)Nothing Is Lost by Noel Coward
Deep in our sub-conscious, we are told
Lie all our memories, lie all the notes
Of all the music we have ever heard
And all the phrases those we loved have spoken,
Sorrows and losses time has since consoled,
Family jokes, out-moded anecdotes
Each sentimental souvenir and token
Everything seen, experienced, each word
Addressed to us in infancy, before
Before we could even know or understand
The implications of our wonderland.
There they all are, the legendary lies
The birthday treats, the sights, the sounds, the tears
Forgotten debris of forgotten years
Waiting to be recalled, waiting to rise
Before our world dissolves before our eyes
Waiting for some small, intimate reminder,
A word, a tune, a known familiar scent
An echo from the past when, innocent
We looked upon the present with delight
And doubted not the future would be kinder
And never knew the loneliness of night.
~ from Good Poems for Hard Times, Selected by Garrison Keillor (Viking, 2005)Reserved for Poets by Naomi Shihab Nye
(signs on first rows of chairs at poetry festival, La Conner, Washington)
Sunsets.
Trouble.
Full moons.
No really—they’re everybody’s.
Nothing is reserved.
We’re all poets rippling with
layers of memories,
mostly what we might forget.
Let it belong. Every pocket,
satchel, hand.
We forgot to make a reservation.
But there’s room.
~ from Voices in the Air (Greenwillow Books, 2018)The Long Boat by Stanley Kunitz
When his boat snapped loose
from its mooring, under
the screaking of the gulls,
he tried at first to wave
to his dear ones on shore,
but in the rolling fog
they had already lost their faces.
Too tired even to choose
between jumping and calling,
somehow he felt absolved and free
of his burdens, those mottoes
stamped on his name-tag:
conscience, ambition, and all
that caring.
He was content to lie down
with the family ghosts
in the slop of his cradle,
buffeted by the storm,
endlessly drifting.
Peace! Peace!
To be rocked by the Infinite!
As if it didn't matter
which way was home;
as if he didn't know
he loved the earth so much
he wanted to stay forever
~ from The Collected Poems (W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. 2000)Processes by Joan Colby
Ten years ago
I was writing poems
brief as bird tracks.
A wing encapsuled
an entire spring.
Three morning grace notes
scored all summer.
A single beak
bit off autumn like a worm.
A few hieroglyphs
on the snow
said everything there was
to know of winter.
I was younger then.
I was more certain.
All my short spare poems
knotted themselves into a final word
like a crow shot from a tree.
But I’ve lost that brevity,
that arrogance
of what is what,
and my poems
flock like blackbirds
gleaning word after word,
line after line
from the waving field.
They are still famished,
cawing terribly in my mind.
I don’t know what to give them.
I keep on writing,
and writing.
~ from What have you lost? (HarperCollins, Greenwillow Books, 1999)