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Poetry

July 04, 2009

I Hear America Singing

I Hear America Singing

I hear America singing, the varied carols I hear,
Those of mechanics, each one singing his as it should be blithe and strong,
The carpenter singing his as he measures his plank or beam,
The mason singing his as he makes ready for work, or leaves off work,
The boatman singing what belongs to him in his boat, the deckhand
     singing on the steamboat deck,
The shoemaker singing as he sits on his bench, the hatter singing as he stands,
The wood-cutter's song, the ploughboy's on his way in the morning, or
     at noon intermission or at sundown,
The delicious singing of the mother, or of the young wife at work, or of
     the girl sewing or washing,
Each singing what belongs to him or her and to none else,
The day what belongs to the day—at night the party of young fellows,
     robust, friendly,
Singing with open mouths their strong melodious songs.

Walt Whitman

June 21, 2009

Happy Father's Day

S-FATHER-AND-SON-large

On the Beach at Night

On the beach at night,
Stands a child with her father,
Watching the east, the autumn sky.

Up through the darkness,
While ravening clouds, the burial clouds, in black masses spreading,
Lower sullen and fast athwart and down the sky,
Amid a transparent clear belt of ether yet left in the east,
Ascends large and calm the lord-star Jupiter,
And nigh at hand, only a very little above,
Swim the delicate sisters the Pleiades.

From the beach the child holding the hand of her father,
Those burial-clouds that lower victorious soon to devour all,
Watching, silently weeps.

Weep not, child,
Weep not, my darling,
With these kisses let me remove your tears,
The ravening clouds shall not long be victorious,
They shall not long possess the sky, they devour the stars only in apparition,
Jupiter shall emerge, be patient, watch again another night, the Pleiades shall emerge,
They are immortal, all those stars both silvery and golden shall shine out again,
The great stars and the little ones shall shine out again, they endure,
The vast immortal suns and the long-enduring pensive moons shall again shine.

Then dearest child mournest thou only for Jupiter?
Considerest thou alone the burial of the stars?

Something there is,
(With my lips soothing thee, adding I whisper,
I give thee the first suggestion, the problem and indirection,)
Something there is more immortal even than the stars,
(Many the burials, many the days and nights, passing away,)
Something that shall endure longer even than lustrous Jupiter
Longer than sun or any revolving satellite,
Or the radiant sisters the Pleiades.


Walt Whitman  1900

May 24, 2009

A poem for Memorial Day weekend

World War I British forces provided a wealth of beautiful poetry commemorating the war and the men who fought it.  Here's a Memorial Day poem.


Aftermath


HAVE you forgotten yet?...
For the world's events have rumbled on since those gagged days,
Like traffic checked while at the crossing of city-ways:
And the haunted gap in your mind has filled with thoughts that flow
Like clouds in the lit heaven of life; and you're a man reprieved to go,
Taking your peaceful share of Time, with joy to spare.
But the past is just the same-and War's a bloody game...
Have you forgotten yet?...
Look down, and swear by the slain of the War that you'll never forget.

Do you remember the dark months you held the sector at Mametz--
The nights you watched and wired and dug and piled sandbags on parapets?
Do you remember the rats; and the stench
Of corpses rotting in front of the front-line trench-
And dawn coming, dirty-white, and chill with a hopeless rain?
Do you ever stop and ask, 'Is it all going to happen again?'

Do you remember that hour of din before the attack--
And the anger, the blind compassion that seized and shook you then
As you peered at the doomed and haggard faces of your men?
Do you remember the stretcher-cases lurching back
With dying eyes and lolling heads-those ashen-grey
Masks of the lads who once were keen and kind and gay?

Have you forgotten yet?...
Look up, and swear by the green of the spring that you'll never forget.

Siegfried Sassoon, 1920

May 10, 2009

Happy Mother's Day

To My Mother

They tell us of an Indian tree
    Which howsoe'er the sun and sky
May tempt its boughs to wander free,
    And shoot and blossom, wide and high,
Far better loves to bend its arms
    Downward again to that dear earth
From which the life that fills and warms
    Its grateful being, first had birth,
'Tis thus, though wooed by flattering friends,
    And fed with fame (if fame it may be),
This heart, my own dear mother, bends,
    With love's true instinct, back to thee!

- Thomas Moore

May 08, 2009

Wendy Cope's 'Audience"

There's a terrific article in today's Times by British poet Wendy Cope on her collaboration to produce a musical piece that incorporates her poetry.  The piece would "create a series of characters in words and music who are drawn from archetypal audience and performer types.”  The completed work, "The Audience" will debut tomorrow in Norwich in England.  From the article:

One of the ideas he came back with was the person who is struggling not to cough. Like any concertgoer, I have sometimes found myself in that position, so I decided to have a go at a poem on the subject: “There’s a tickle in your throat,” it begins, “And you’ve hardly heard a note/ And you’re wishing you were in some other place.” The battle goes on for four stanzas until the poem ends with the words “You may cough”. I’ve formed the impression, at concerts, plays, poetry readings and church services, that some people don’t struggle hard enough not to cough. The poem reminds them that they should at least try. However, when I’ve included it in poetry readings, I’ve noticed that it is counterproductive. At one reading a coughing woman had to leave the room shortly after I read the poem.

In looking for something to post to accompany this article from the Times, I came across several videos of Ms. Cope's work being read.  All very lovely, but I was particularly struck by this one of the author reading a poem about 9/11.  While the split screen is distracting, it thankfully disappears as she begins to read and we're left with a spare, stunning poem.

May 04, 2009

The new (female) poet laureate of Britain

Last Friday, Carol Ann Duffy became the first female poet laureate of Great Britain, joining a very exclusive club that included, among others, Dryden, Tennyson, and Wordsworth. 

Once considered little more than royal cheerleaders, the British poet laureates have become more and more accessible.  Andrew Motion, Ms. Duffy's predecessor, became well known and was active in popularizing poetry by utilizing the Internet and encouraging poetry in schools and elsewhere.

From the NY Times profile of Carol Ann Duffy:

Ms. Duffy, the oldest of five children, grew up in a working-class neighborhood in Glasgow, Scotland. She began writing poetry in school, inspired by several teachers (she mentioned their names on the radio on Friday), and in 1983 won the National Poetry Competition in Britain.

Ms. Duffy, 53, is known for using a deceptively simple style to produce accessible, often mischievous poems dealing with the darkest turmoil and the lightest minutiae of everyday life. In her most popular collection, “The World’s Wife” (1999), overlooked women in history and mythology get the chance to tell their side of the story, so that one poem imagines, for instance, the relief that Mrs. Rip Van Winkle must have felt when her husband fell asleep, finally giving her some time for herself.

As poet laureate, Ms. Duffy is to receive £5,750, or $8,500, a year. She said she planned to donate the money to the Poetry Society, to finance an annual poetry prize.

Poets laureate also traditionally receive “a butt of sack,” which translates into about 600 bottles of sherry. Mr. Motion has for some reason failed to collect his requisite sherry, Ms. Duffy said, “so I’ve asked for mine up front.”

From Ms. Duffy:

Words, Wide Night

Somewhere on the other side of this wide night
and the distance between us, I am thinking of you.
The room is turning slowly away from the moon.

This is pleasurable. Or shall I cross that out and say
it is sad? In one of the tenses I singing
an impossible song of desire that you cannot hear.

La lala la. See? I close my eyes and imagine the dark hills I would have to cross
to reach you. For I am in love with you

and this is what it is like or what it is like in words.

April 30, 2009

A final poem for National Poetry Month

Faint Music

Maybe you need to write a poem about grace.

When everything broken is broken,
and everything dead is dead,
and the hero has looked into the mirror with complete contempt,
and the heroine has studied her face and its defects
remorselessly, and the pain they thought might,
as a token of their earnestness, release them from themselves
has lost its novelty and not released them,
and they have begun to think, kindly and distantly,
watching the others go about their days—
likes and dislikes, reasons, habits, fears—
that self-love is the one weedy stalk
of every human blossoming, and understood,
therefore, why they had been, all their lives,
in such a fury to defend it, and that no one—
except some almost inconceivable saint in his pool
of poverty and silence—can escape this violent, automatic
life’s companion ever, maybe then, ordinary light,
faint music under things, a hovering like grace appears.

As in the story a friend told once about the time
he tried to kill himself. His girl had left him.
Bees in the heart, then scorpions, maggots, and then ash.
He climbed onto the jumping girder of the bridge,
the bay side, a blue, lucid afternoon.
And in the salt air he thought about the word “seafood,”
that there was something faintly ridiculous about it.
No one said “landfood.” He thought it was degrading to the rainbow perch
he’d reeled in gleaming from the cliffs, the black rockbass,
scales like polished carbon, in beds of kelp
along the coast—and he realized that the reason for the word
was crabs, or mussels, clams. Otherwise
the restaurants could just put “fish” up on their signs,
and when he woke—he’d slept for hours, curled up
on the girder like a child—the sun was going down
and he felt a little better, and afraid. He put on the jacket
he’d used for a pillow, climbed over the railing
carefully, and drove home to an empty house.

There was a pair of her lemon yellow panties
hanging on a doorknob. He studied them. Much-washed.
A faint russet in the crotch that made him sick
with rage and grief. He knew more or less
where she was. A flat somewhere on Russian Hill.
They’d have just finished making love. She’d have tears
in her eyes and touch his jawbone gratefully. “God,”
she’d say, “you are so good for me.” Winking lights,
a foggy view downhill toward the harbor and the bay.
“You’re sad,” he’d say. “Yes.” “Thinking about Nick?”
“Yes,” she’d say and cry. “I tried so hard,” sobbing now,
“I really tried so hard.” And then he’d hold her for a while—
Guatemalan weavings from his fieldwork on the wall—
and then they’d fuck again, and she would cry some more,
and go to sleep.
And he, he would play that scene
once only, once and a half, and tell himself
that he was going to carry it for a very long time
and that there was nothing he could do
but carry it. He went out onto the porch, and listened
to the forest in the summer dark, madrone bark
cracking and curling as the cold came up.

It’s not the story though, not the friend
leaning toward you, saying “And then I realized—,”
which is the part of stories one never quite believes.
I had the idea that the world’s so full of pain
it must sometimes make a kind of singing.
And that the sequence helps, as much as order helps—
First an ego, and then pain, and then the singing.

Robert Hass (born March 1, 1941) s a Pulitzer Prize winning American poet. He served as Poet Laureate of the United States from 1995 to 1997.  He was awarded the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Time and Materials.  As major influences on his poetry, Hass cites beat poet Lew Welch, whose short poem "Raid Kills Bugs Dead" he praised in an online chat. Besides, he has named Chilean Pablo Neruda, Peruvian Cesar Vallejo, and Polish poets Zbigniew Herbert, Wislawa Szymborska, and Czesław Miłosz, whom he regards as the five most important poets of the last 50 years.

April 27, 2009

A poem for National Poetry Month

Juke Box Love Song

I could take the Harlem night
and wrap around you,
Take the neon lights and make a crown,
Take the Lenox Avenue busses,
Taxis, subway,
And for your love song tone their rumble down.
Take Harlem's heartbeat,
Make a drumbeat,
Put in on a record, let it whirl,
And while we listen to it play,
Dance with you till day -
Dance with you, my sweet brown Harlem girl.

Langston Hughes (1902-1967).  Langston Hughes was born in Joplin, Missouri.  He grew up in various midwestern towns and attended Columbia University briefly in the early 1920's.  A leading figure of the Harlem Renaissance, he adapted the blues to his poetic purposes, remarking, "The mood of the Blues is almost always despondency, but when they are sung, people laugh."  The Weary Blues appeared in 1926, his book-length poem Montage of a Dream Deferred in 1951.  Hughes spent one winter in Mexico City, sharing digs with the French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson; he covered the Spanish Civil War for the Baltimore Afro-American.  He bough a home in Harlem, and a stretch of East 127th Street in New York City has been renamed Langston Hughes Place.  ("The Oxford Book of American Poetry")


April 22, 2009

Fanny Howe wins Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize

6a00d8341c630a53ef0115701d3553970b-800wi Last week, The Poetry Foundation awarded its annual Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize to Fanny Howe.  The award comes with a $100,000 prize and is given to a living American artist in recognition of their entire body of work.

In announcing the Lilly Prize, Christian Wiman, editor of Poetry magazine, said: “Fanny Howe is a religious writer whose work makes you more alert and alive to the earth, an experimental writer who can break your heart. Live in her world for a while, and it can change the way you think of yours.” (Link)

11/11
 
I don't believe in ashes; some of the others do.
I don't believe in better or best; some of the others do.
I don't believe in a thousand flowers or the first robin
of the year or statues made of dust. Some of the others do.

I don't believe in seeking sheet music
by Boston Common on a snowy day, don't believe
in the lighting of malls seasonably.
When I'm sleeping I don't believe in time
as we own it, though some of the others might.

Sad lace on-green. Veterans stamping the leafy snow.
I don't believe in holidays
long-lasting and artificial. Some of the others do.
I don't believe in the starlings of crenellated wings.
I don't believe in berries, red & orange, hanging on

threadlike twigs. Some of the others do.
I don't believe in the light on the river
moving with it or the green bulbs hanging in the elms.
Outdoors, indoors, I don't believe in a gridlock of ripples
or the deep walls people live inside.

Some of the others believe in food & drink & perfume.
I don't. And I don't believe in shut-in time
for those who committed a crime
of passion. Like a sweetheart
of the iceberg or wings lost at sea

the wind is what I believe in,
the One that moves around each form.

From Wikipedia:

Howe is one of the most widely read of American experimental poets. She has also published several volumes of prose, including Lives of the Spirit/Glasstown: Where Something Got Broken (2005) and The Wedding Dress: Meditations on Word and Life (2003), a collection of essays. Several awards have been awarded to her, namely the 2001 Lenore Marshall and Poetry Prize, and the 2005 Griffin Poetry Prize. She is currently a professor emerita of Writing and Literature at the University of California, San Diego.

Poet Michael Palmer commented: "Fanny Howe employs a sometimes fierce, always passionate, spareness in her lifelong parsing of the exchange between matter and spirit. Her work displays as well a political urgency, that is to say, a profound concern for social justice and for the soundness and fate of the polis, the "city on a hill". Writes Emerson, The poet is the sayer, the namer, and represents beauty. Here's the luminous and incontrovertible proof."

April 20, 2009

Pulitzer poetry prize goes to W.S. Merwin

The Pulitzer Prizes were awarded today.  (For a full list of winners, go here).  The 2009 Pulitzer Prize winner for poetry was W.S. Merwin for his anthology, "The Shadow of Sirius".

Here's a poem from the anthology:

The Laughing Thrush

O nameless joy of the morning

tumbling upward note by note out of the night
and the hush of the dark valley
and out of whatever has not been there

song unquestioning and unbounded
yes this is the place and the one time
in the whole of before and after
with all of memory waking into it

and the lost visages that hover
around the edge of sleep
constant and clear
and the words that lately have fallen silent
to surface among the phrases of some future
if there is a future

here is where they all sing the first daylight
whether or not there is anyone listening

William Stanley Merwin (born 30 September 1927 ) is an American poet. He made a name for himself as an anti-war poet during the 1960s. Later, he would evolve toward mythological themes and develop a unique prosody characterized by indirect narration and the absence of punctuation. In the 80s and 90s, Merwin's interest in Buddhist philosophy and deep ecology also influenced his writing. He continues to write prolifically, though he also dedicates significant time to the restoration of rainforests in Hawaii, where he currently resides. (Wikipedia)