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Poems that you love - Printable Version +- Poetry Forum (https://www.pigpenpoetry.com) +-- Forum: Discussion Boards (https://www.pigpenpoetry.com/forum-7.html) +--- Forum: Poetry Discussion (https://www.pigpenpoetry.com/forum-10.html) +--- Thread: Poems that you love (/thread-7500.html) |
RE: Poems that you love - RiverNotch - 04-10-2018 A Song on the End of the World BY CZESLAW MILOSZ TRANSLATED BY ANTHONY MILOSZ On the day the world ends A bee circles a clover, A fisherman mends a glimmering net. Happy porpoises jump in the sea, By the rainspout young sparrows are playing And the snake is gold-skinned as it should always be. On the day the world ends Women walk through the fields under their umbrellas, A drunkard grows sleepy at the edge of a lawn, Vegetable peddlers shout in the street And a yellow-sailed boat comes nearer the island, The voice of a violin lasts in the air And leads into a starry night. And those who expected lightning and thunder Are disappointed. And those who expected signs and archangels’ trumps Do not believe it is happening now. As long as the sun and the moon are above, As long as the bumblebee visits a rose, As long as rosy infants are born No one believes it is happening now. Only a white-haired old man, who would be a prophet Yet is not a prophet, for he’s much too busy, Repeats while he binds his tomatoes: There will be no other end of the world, There will be no other end of the world. Warsaw, 1944 RE: Poems that you love - RiverNotch - 04-13-2018 ps i might be posting a lot of stuff already posted in other threads throughout the site -- not that i don't have anything new, it's just that i'd love to discuss some pieces in a somewhat different context -- but if y'all want to talk about pieces you've read that you just wanna share with everyone, and in a slightly different context from this thread, pms welcome. RE: Poems that you love - danny_ - 04-14-2018 "y'all" ! You sound like the folks from here. I say that too sometimes, but not nearly as much as the ones born and raised here in South Carolina. I do love this area. What state are you in? By the way, I really like the style of that last poem. Very clear and full of great images. Thanks for sharing. RE: Poems that you love - RiverNotch - 04-17-2018 YW. Ooh, I'm not American. I just like using y'all when typing (or speaking) because it's easier (and sounds better). Although maybe my very brief time in Texas had something to do with it, too... RE: Poems that you love - Richard - 05-02-2018 Klein is one of my favorite poets of all time. Heirloom by A. M. Klein My father bequeathed me no wide estates; No keys and ledgers were my heritage; Only some holy books with yahrzeit dates Writ mournfully upon a blank front page — Books of the Baal Shem Tov, and of his wonders; Pamphlets upon the devil and his crew; Prayers against road demons, witches, thunders; And sundry other tomes for a good Jew. Beautiful: though no pictures on them, save The scorpion crawling on a printed track; The Virgin floating on a scriptural wave, Square letters twinkling in the Zodiac. The snuff left on this page, now brown and old, The tallow stains of midnight liturgy — These are my coat of arms, and these unfold My noble lineage, my proud ancestry! And my tears, too, have stained this heirloomed ground, When reading in these treatises some weird Miracle, I turned a leaf and found A white hair fallen from my father’s beard. RE: Poems that you love - Todd - 09-11-2018 Good Bones Life is short, though I keep this from my children. Life is short, and I’ve shortened mine in a thousand delicious, ill-advised ways, a thousand deliciously ill-advised ways I’ll keep from my children. The world is at least fifty percent terrible, and that’s a conservative estimate, though I keep this from my children. For every bird there is a stone thrown at a bird. For every loved child, a child broken, bagged, sunk in a lake. Life is short and the world is at least half terrible, and for every kind stranger, there is one who would break you, though I keep this from my children. I am trying to sell them the world. Any decent realtor, walking you through a real shithole, chirps on about good bones: This place could be beautiful, right? You could make this place beautiful. BY Maggie Smith RE: Poems that you love - dukealien - 09-11-2018 (09-11-2018, 03:43 AM)Todd Wrote: Good BonesTerrible, terrible - the world is not beautiful. But perhaps only half of it... RE: Poems that you love - busker - 09-19-2018 (09-11-2018, 03:43 AM)Todd Wrote: sunk in a lake.Wow! She’s put up a fair bit of her poetry online Thanks for the discovery RE: Poems that you love - Todd - 09-21-2018 (09-19-2018, 07:09 AM)Busker Wrote:Glad, you like her!(09-11-2018, 03:43 AM)Todd Wrote: sunk in a lake.Wow! RE: Poems that you love - Grace - 10-02-2018 Skeins o Geese Skeins o geese write a word across the sky. A word struck lik a gong afore I wis born. The sky moves like cattle, lowin. I’m as empty as stane, as fields ploo’d but not sown, naked an blin as a stane. Blin tae the word, blin tae a’ soon but geese ca’ing. Wire twists lik archaic script roon a gate. The barbs sign tae the wind as though it was deef. The word whistles ower high for ma senses. Awa. No lik the past which lies strewn aroun. Nor sudden death. No like a lover we’ll ken an connect wi forever. The hem of its goin drags across the sky. Whit dae birds write on the dusk? A word niver spoken or read. The skeins turn hame, on the wind’s dumb moan, a soan, maybe human, bereft. Kathleen Jamie RE: Poems that you love - ellajam - 10-03-2018 ^^^^mmmm. It took a bit of work as Scottish doesn't come naturally for me but now that I've got it it's lovely. Thanks ![]() RE: Poems that you love - rowens - 01-15-2019 Dream Song 1 John Berryman Huffy Henry hid the day, unappeasable Henry sulked. I see his point,–a trying to put things over. It was the thought that they thought they could do it made Henry wicked & away. But he should have come out and talked. All the world like a woolen lover once did seem on Henry’s side. Then came a departure. Thereafter nothing fell out as it might or ought. I don’t see how Henry, pried open for all the world to see, survived. What he has now to say is a long wonder the world can bear & be. Once in a sycamore I was glad all at the top, and I sang. Hard on the land wears the strong sea and empty grows every bed. RE: Poems that you love - rowens - 01-24-2019 The words won't paste. Listening is better. James Dickey Under Buzzards. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHkZhYDxmNw Mine is the Turkey-Vulture. I've written about them. They're graceful. I got them in my Deep Woods book I've been making lately. RE: Poems that you love - rowens - 01-25-2019 Voices From The Other World James Merrill Presently at our touch the teacup stirred, Then circled lazily about From A to Z. The first voice heard (If they are voices, these mute spellers-out) Was that of an engineer Originally from Cologne. Dead in his 22nd year Of cholera in Cairo, he had KNOWN NO HAPPINESS. He once met Goethe, though. Goethe had told him: PERSEVERE. Our blind hound whined. With that, a horde Of voices gathered above the Ouija board, Some childish and, you might say, blurred By sleep; one little boy Named Will, reluctant possibly in a ruff Like a large-lidded page out of El Greco, pulled Back the arras for that next voice, Cold and portentous: ALL IS LOST. FLEE THIS HOUSE. OTTO VON THURN UND TAXIS. OBEY. YOU HAVE NO CHOICE. Frightened, we stopped; but tossed Till sunrise striped the rumpled sheets with gold. Each night since then, the moon waxes, Small insects flit round a cold torch We light, that sends them pattering to the porch . . . But no real Sign. New voices come, Dictate addresses, begging us to write; Some warn of lives misspent, and all of doom In way’s that so exhilarate We are sleeping sound of late. Last night the teacup shattered in a rage. Indeed, we have grown nonchalant Towards the other world. In the gloom here, our elbows on the cleared Table, we talk and smoke, pleased to be stirred Rather by buzzings in the jasmine, by the drone Of our own voices and poor blind Rover’s wheeze, Than by those clamoring overhead, Obsessed or piteous, for a commitment We still have wit to postpone Because, once looked at lit By the cold reflections of the dead Risen extinct but irresistible, Our lives have never seemed more full, more real, Nor the full moon more quick to chill. The moon gives me a warm feeling. But I see his point. RE: Poems that you love - busker - 01-25-2019 (04-10-2018, 02:13 PM)RiverNotch Wrote: A Song on the End of the Worldcoming to it late.....beautiful, just beautiful RE: Poems that you love - Richard - 01-25-2019 Knowing I Live in a Dark Age by Milton Acorn Knowing I live in a dark age before history, I watch my wallet and am less struck by gunfights in the avenues than by the newsie with his dirty pink chapped face calling a shabby poet back for his change. The crows mobbing the blinking, sun-stupid owl; wolves eating a hamstrung calf hind end first, keeping their meat alive and fresh. . .these are marks of foresight, beginnings of wit: but Jesus wearing thorns and sunstroke beating his life and death into words to break the rods and blunt the axes of Rome; this and like things followed. Knowing that in this advertising rainbow I live like a trapeze artist with a headache, my poems are no aspirins. . . they show pale bayonets of grass waving thin on dunes; the paralytic and his lyric secrets; my friend Al, union builder and cynic, hesitating to believe his own delicate poems lest he believe in something better than himself: and history, which is yet to begin, will exceed this, exalt this as a poem erases and rewrites its poet. RE: Poems that you love - ellajam - 01-25-2019 “hesitating to believe his own delicate poems” Good read, Richard, thanks. RE: Poems that you love - Truerenigma - 01-27-2019 Darling, It’s Frightening Darling, it's frightening! When a poet loves he might be an unshriven god enraptured. And chaos creeps again up to the light, as in the far off ages of the fossils. His eyes weep tons of billows and he's swathed in cloud, so that you'd take him for a mammoth. He's out of date. He knows it's no more use. His days are over now and he's illiterate. He sees the way his neighbors hold their weddings, how they get roaring drunk and sleep it off, how they call common roe - that pickled frogspawn, - once she's been married off, the best pressed caviar. And how they manage to squeeze in a snuff-box life that is like a pearly dream by Watteau. They take revenge on him; perhaps it's only because, while they are twisting and contorting, while sniggering bourgeois comfort lies and flatters and they rub shoulders with the drones and crawl, he's raised a girl like you from earth and used her, like a Bacchante from her amphora. And thawing of the Andes melts in kisses and morning's on the steppe, beneath the dominion of stars that fall in dust, as night goes stumbling with bleat growing ever paler, through the village. And round the straw bed's fevered pain breathe all the exhalations of the ancient pit and all the vestry's gloomy vegetation. And chaos splashes up out of the jungle. Boris Pasternak (1890-1960) Trans. J. M. Cowen RE: Poems that you love - Richard - 01-31-2019 Let's keep the Canadian content coming ![]() Warren Pryor by Alden Nowlan When every pencil meant a sacrifice his parents boarded him at school in town, slaving to free him from the stony fields, the meager acreage that bore them down. They blushed with pride when, at his graduation, they watched him picking up the slender scroll, his passport from the years of brutal toil and lonely patience in a barren hole. When he went in the Bank their cups ran over. They marveled how he wore a milk-white shirt work days and jeans on Sundays. He was saved from their thistle-strewn farm and its red dirt. And he said nothing. Hard and serious like a young bear inside his teller's cage, his axe-hewn hands upon the paper bills aching with empty strength and throttled rage. RE: Poems that you love - rowens - 02-02-2019 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7K2iF3hDT0 Because it's not always a good poem unless you hear them read it. |