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

EXPLORE MY WRITING CLASSES
Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Second Marriage, or Lemon Chicken by Laura Foley

It begins at the Chinese place
on Spring Street,
our first date.
Though the dish looks good,
I cannot eat.
He scrapes my leftovers
to the sidewalk
for his patient old Lab,
waiting by the restaurant door.
I have that queasy, excited feeling,
when you know something
is about to happen.
 
~ from Night Ringing (Headmistress Press, 2016)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Let This Darkness Be a Bell Tower by Rainer Maria Rilke

Quiet friend who has come so far,
feel how your breathing makes more space around you.
Let this darkness be a bell tower
and you the bell. As you ring,

what batters you becomes your strength.
Move back and forth into the change.
What is it like, such intensity of pain?
If the drink is bitter, turn yourself to wine.

In this uncontainable night,
be the mystery at the crossroads of your senses,
the meaning discovered there.

And if the world has ceased to hear you,
say to the silent earth: I flow.
To the rushing water, speak: I am.

~ from In Praise of Mortality, Sonnets to Orpheus II, 29;
(Riverhead Books, 2005) translation by Joanna Macy and Anita Barrows.
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Poem for my Birthday by Lisel Mueller

I have stopped being the heroine	
of my bad dreams.  The melodramas		
of betrayal and narrow escapes
from which I wake up grateful
for an unexciting life
are starring my troubled young friend
or one of my daughters.  I’m not the one
who swims too far out to sea;
I am the one who waves from shore		
vainly and in despair.
Life is what happens to someone else;
I stand on the sidelines and wring my hands.
Strange that my dreams should have accepted	
the minor role I’ve been cast in
by stories since stories began.
Does that mean I have solved my life?
I’m still afraid in my dreams, but not for myself.
Fear gets rededicated	
with a new stone that bears a needier name.

~ from Alive Together  (Louisiana State University Press, 1996)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

The Healing Time by Pesha Joyce Gertler

Finally on my way to yes
I bump into
all the places
where I said no
to my life
all the untended wounds
the red and purple scars
those hieroglyphs of pain
carved into my skin, my bones,
those coded messages
that send me down
the wrong street
again and again
where I find them
the old wounds
the old misdirections
and I lift them
one by one
close to my heart
and I say holy
holy.

~ from The Healing Time: Finally On My Way to Yes  
(Pudding House Publications, 2008)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Sometimes I am startled out of myself by Barbara Crooker

like this morning, when the wild geese came squawking,  
flapping their rusty hinges, and something about their trek 
across the sky made me think about my life, the places 
of brokenness, the places of sorrow, the places where grief 
has strung me out to dry. And then the geese come calling, 
the leader falling back when tired, another taking her place. 
Hope is borne on wings. Look at the trees. They turn to gold 
for a brief while, then lose it all each November. 
Through the cold months, they stand, take the worst 
weather has to offer. And still, they put out shy green leaves 
come April, come May. The geese glide over the cornfields, 
land on the pond with its sedges and reeds. 
You do not have to be wise. Even a goose knows how to find 
shelter, where the corn still lies in the stubble and dried stalks. 
All we do is pass through here, the best way we can. 
They stitch up the sky, and it is whole again.

~ from Radiance (Word Press, 2005)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

That Lives In Us by Rumi

If you put your hands on this oar with me, 
they will never harm another, and they will come to find 
they hold everything you want. 

If you put your hands on this oar with me, they would no longer 
lift anything to your 
mouth that might wound your precious land – 
that sacred earth that is your body. 

If you put your soul against this oar with me, 
the power that made the universe will enter your sinew 
from a source not outside your limbs, but from a holy realm 
that lives in us. 

Exuberant is existence, time a husk. 
When the moment cracks open, ecstasy leaps out and devours space; 
love goes mad with the blessings, like my words give. 

Why lay yourself on the torturer’s rack of the past and the future? 
The mind that tries to shape tomorrow beyond its capacities 
will find no rest. 

Be kind to yourself, dear – to our innocent follies. 
Forget any sounds or touch you knew that did not help you dance. 
You will come to see that all evolves us. 

~from Love Poems From God: Twelve Sacred Voices from the East 
and West by Daniel Ladinsky (Penguin Books, 2002)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Thank You by Ross Gay

If you find yourself half naked
and barefoot in the frosty grass, hearing,
again, the earth’s great, sonorous moan that says
you are the air of the now and gone, that says
all you love will turn to dust,
and will meet you there, do not
raise your fist. Do not raise
your small voice against it. And do not
take cover. Instead, curl your toes
into the grass, watch the cloud
ascending from your lips. Walk
through the garden’s dormant splendor.
Say only, thank you.
Thank you.

~from Against Which  (CavanKerry Press Ltd. 2006)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Easter Ghazal by David Young

Dreaming the dead back to life: pleasure & gentleness.
Grateful for this miracle, this bubble of reunion.

Harps bounce & hum there in the firmament.
The fundament. Coining likenesses. Did you say something?

Bricks crumb, bones powder: this helps make potting soil.
Clay reproduces! Ploughs heal the fields they wound.

Today we trim the rabbit’s nails upside the hutch,
Nail up the bat-house, baptize each other with the hose.

I’m flame. A flag going up a flagpole. I’m
The beetle dropped by the mother bird, picked up again.

The heart’s a tomato with lips. Woodpeckers tap hosannas.
Sleepy blips & explosions fleck love's radar screen.

Something rises. Something drops. Elastic days!
Tonight the window’s black with possibility.

~ from Field of Light and Shadow (Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Penguin Random House, 2010)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

The Whole Account by Abba Kovner

You began to love in times of disgust.
Close at hand there was no tree, no sign 	
of a living stem or flower, and when there was no 
  reason to sing
it was your laughter, jubilant, rousing, saying: There 
  is someone here
alive—joyful!  And many, so many, then were lying curled 
  up and fearful
in grimy shadow and you began to love without dousing the 
  light of the carbide
and went down to the boat that threatened to break up at sea, 
  and you conceived
against doctor’s orders.  Unannounced, you strode the dead streets,
marching—all forty-five kilos of you!—as if on a victory parade
of life flowing beneath the surface of all
the words, like a fountain flowing, cascading
with confidence, telling no lies.

~  from SLOAN-KETTERING, translated by Eddie Levenston, Schocken Books, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC, New York, 2002)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Sunday Night by Raymond Carver

Make use of the things around you.
This light rain
outside the window, for one.
This cigarette between my fingers,
these feet on the couch.
The faint sound of rock-and-roll,
the red Ferrari in my head.
The woman bumping
drunkenly around in the kitchen . . .
put it all in,
make use.

~ from A New Path To The Waterfall (The Atlantic Monthly Press, 1989)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Greek Portrait by Czeslaw Milosz

My beard is thick, my eyelids half cover
My eyes, as with those who know the value
Of visible things. I keep quiet as is proper
For a man who has learned that the human heart
Holds more than speech does. I have left behind
My native land, home, and public office.
Not that I looked for profit or adventure.
I am no foreigner on board a ship.
My plain face, the face of a tax-collector,
Merchant, or soldier, makes me one of the crowd.
Nor do I refuse to pay due homage
To local gods. And I eat what others eat.
About myself, this much will suffice.

~Selected Poems 1931-2004 (HarperCollins, 2006)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

The Sick Wife by Jane Kenyon

The sick wife stayed in the car
while he bought a few groceries.
Not yet fifty,
she had learned what it’s like
not to be able to button a button.

It was the middle of the day—
and so only mothers with small children
and retired couples
stepped through the muddy parking lot.

Dry cleaning swung and gleamed on hangers
in the cars of the prosperous.
How easily they moved—
with such freedom,
even the old and relatively infirm.

The windows began to steam up.
The cars on either side of her
pulled away so briskly
that it made her sick at heart.

~ from Collected Poems (Greywolf Press, 2005)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

I’m Going to Start Living Like a Mystic by Edward Hirsch

Today I am pulling on a green wool sweater
and walking across the park in a dusky snowfall.

The trees stand like twenty-seven prophets in a field,
each a station in a pilgrimage—silent, pondering.

Blue flakes of light falling across their bodies
are the ciphers of a secret, an occultation.

I will examine their leaves as pages in a text
and consider the bookish pigeons, students of winter.

I will kneel on the track of a vanquished squirrel
and stare into a blank pond for the figure of Sophia.

I shall begin scouring the sky for signs
as if my whole future were constellated upon it.

I will walk home alone with the deep alone,
a disciple of shadows, in praise of the mysteries.

~ from 180 More, Extraordinary Poems for Every Day, Selected by Billy Collins (Random House, 2005)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Optimism by Jane Hirshfield

More and more I have come to admire resilience.
Not the simple resistance of a pillow, whose foam
returns over and over to the same shape, but the sinuous
tenacity of a tree: finding the light newly blocked on one side,
it turns in another. A blind intelligence, true.
But out of such persistence arose turtles, rivers,
mitochondria, figs--all this resinous, unretractable earth.

~ From Given Sugar, Given Salt (HarperCollins 2001)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Old Iron by Naomi Shihab Nye

Some days the words pass us,	
cars loaded with vacationers.
We are not going where they are going.
Soon as they top the hill	
we’ll be on the lost road again,
shouting once, then listening,
kicking a stone towards
anything like a tree.

Then the first language crawls back	
into the ears, humming.
A twig scratches two words	
in damp red earth:
NO   THOUGHT.
I’m looking for cedar stumps,	
a black calf in a blue field,
anything to report
that has nothing to do with my life.

I’m looking for the rusted skillet	
hunters left hanging on a branch.
Years after they sighed in firelight	
the tree claims their old iron
as another natural arm.

~ from Words Under the Words: Selected Poems 
(Far Corner Books, 1995)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

the soft law (forgiveness) by Nayyirah Waheed

the prayers where we do not wish others well.
for all the brilliant.  fetid.  noxious.  reasons.
the prayers we want to wash from the sky.   as soon as they 
  leave our imagination.  
the ones born with no bones.  so they leave no trace.
the harmful prayers.  we pray.
because
we have been harmed.

we are forgiven those too.

~ from Nejma (copyright 2014 Nayyirah Waheed)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

For Old Age by John O'Donohue

May the light of your soul mind you.

May all your worry and anxiousness about your age
be transfigured.

May you be given wisdom for the eyes of your soul
To see this as a time of gracious harvesting.
May you have the passion to heal what has hurt you,
and allow it to come closer and become one with you.

May you have great dignity, 
And a sense of how free you are,
Above all, may you be given the wonderful gift 
Of meeting the eternal light that is within you.

May you be blessed; 
And may you find a wonderful love 
in yourself for yourself.

~from Walking in Wonder, Eternal Wisdom For A Modern World (Convergent, 2018)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

I Happened to be Standing by Mary Oliver

I don't know where prayers go,
  or what they do. 
Do cats pray, while they sleep      
   half-asleep in the sun? 
Does the opossum pray as it      
   crosses the street? 
The sunflowers? The old black oak      
   growing older every year? 
I know I can walk through the world,      
   along the shore or under the trees, 
with my mind filled with things      
   of little importance, in full 
self-attendance. A condition I can't really      
   call being alive 
Is a prayer a gift, or a petition,      
   or does it matter? 
The sunflowers blaze, maybe that's their way. 
Maybe the cats are sound asleep. Maybe not.  

While I was thinking this I happened to be standing 
just outside my door, with my notebook open, 
which is the way I begin every morning. 
Then a wren in the privet began to sing. 
He was positively drenched in enthusiasm, 
I don't know why. And yet, why not. 
I wouldn't persuade you from whatever you believe 
or whatever you don't. That's your business. 
But I thought, of the wren's singing, what could this be      
   if it isn't a prayer? 
So I just listened, my pen in the air.

~ from A Thousand Mornings (The Penguin Press, 2012)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

Love: Beginnings by C.K. Williams

They're at that stage where so much desire streams between them, 
          so much frank need and want,
 so much absorption in the other and the self and the self-admiring 
          entity and unity they make—
 her mouth so full, breast so lifted, head thrown back so far in her 
          laughter at his laughter,
 he so solid, planted, oaky, firm, so resonantly factual in the 
          headiness of being craved so,
 she almost wreathed upon him as they intertwine again, touch again, 
          cheek, lip, shoulder, brow,
 every glance moving toward the sexual, every glance away soaring 
          back in flame into the sexual—
 that just to watch them is to feel again that hitching in the groin, 
          that filling of the heart,
 the old, sore heart, the battered, foundered, faithful heart, 
         snorting  again, stamping in its stall.

~ from Flesh and Blood (Farrar/Straus/Giroux, New York, 1998)
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Sharon Singer Sharon Singer

The Women’s Litany by Margaret Widdemer

Let us in through the guarded gate,
Let us in for our pain’s sake!
Lips set smiling and face made fair
Still for you through the pain we bare,
We have hid till our hearts were sore
Blacker things than you ever bore:
Let us in through the guarded gate,
Let us in for our pain’s sake! 

Let us in through the guarded gate,
Let us in for our strength’s sake!
Light held high in a strife ne’er through
We have fought for our sons and you,
We have conquered a million years’
Pain and evil and doubt and tears—
Let us in through the guarded gate,
Let us in for our strength’s sake! 

Let us in through the guarded gate,
Let us in for your own sake!
We have held you within our hand,
Marred or made as we broke or planned,
We have given you life or killed
King or brute as we taught or willed—
Let us in through the guarded gate,
Let us in for your own sake! 

Let us in through the guarded gate,
Let us in for the world’s sake!
We are blind who must guide your eyes,
We are weak who must help you rise,
All untaught who must teach and mold
Souls of men till the world is old—
Let us in through the guarded gate,
Let us in for the world’s sake! 

~ This poem is in the public domain
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