Poetry
ENCOUNTER
We were riding through frozen fields in a wagon at dawn.
A red wing rose in the darkness.
And suddenly a hare ran across the road.
One of us pointed to it with his hand.
That was long ago. Today neither of them is alive,
Not the hare, nor the man who made the gesture.
O my love, where are they, where are they going
The flash of a hand, streak of movement, rustle of pebbles.
I ask not out of sorrow, but in wonder.
– Czeslaw Milosz
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
LATE FRAGMENT
And did you get what
you wanted from this life, even so?
I did.
And what did you want?
To call myself beloved, to feel myself
beloved on the earth.
– Raymond Carver
——————-
Voluntary simplicity involves both inner and other conditions. It means singleness of purpose, sincerity and honesty within, as well as avoidance of exterior clutter, of many possessions irrelevant to the chief purpose of life. It means an ordering and guiding of our energy and our desires, a partial restraint in some directions in order to secure greater abundance of life in other directions. It involves a deliberate organization of life for a purpose.
Author Unknown
—————–
REMEMBRANCE DAY
I loved to shuffle
in your slippers red plaid
broken down at the heels
for when your car turned
into the driveway
I’d balance backwards
down six steps, and leave them
pointed, ready, warmed for you.
…
The night you fell
beside the hospital bed
unnoticed to the floor
I did not feel your falling
I only heard the phone
later in the dead of night
I stood, a stone
your kitchen cenotaph
Father, you are remembered.
…
The first Spring you missed
in eighty years
the rain drenched me.
The sidewalks puddled in cherry blossoms
haloes round street lamps
what celebration this pink confetti
swirling.
Father.
Every bus stop
every old man standing
stung my eyes.
You loved the Spring always
walking the gardens
among budding trees.
Father.
…
November’s leaden cold
marble monuments built to glory.
We pile our dead
history weighing the ground.
Story by story stone upon stone
we stand in silence, bowing our heads.
…
This now is this day
and today I sit, with memories
loose thoughts walking through my brain.
I sit, and leaves brush against windows
in their falling.
I feel the pulse of life in this house
moving in hushed reminders around me.
Today is the day old men and women weep
and remember.
This is designated sorrow time and I long
to see my father’s bony feet, and offer
for the first time, to hold them in my hands
and rub them into warmth for all they’re worth.
Father.
…
But we can never have the same
and try it differently, but never mind.
We’re all forgiven. We’re all forgiven.
Tonight I bring these words to you
my offerings paper monuments
before which I stand.
I say I say Stand up.
These are my monuments
I say stand up. Stand up.
What are yours?
– Diane Toulmin
—————-
RED
Red was your colour.
If not red, then white. But red
Was what you wrapped around you.
Blood-red. Was it blood?
Was it red-ochre, for warming the dead?
Haematite to make immortal
The precious heirloom bones, the family bones.
…
When you had your way finally
Our room was red. A judgement chamber.
Shut casket for gems. The carpet of blood
Patterned with darkenings, congealments.
The curtains – ruby corduroy blood.
Sheer blood-falls from ceiling to floor.
The cushions the same. The same
Raw carmine along the window-seat.
A throbbing cell. Aztec altar – temple.
…
Only the bookshelves escaped into whiteness.
…
And outside the window
Poppies thin and wrinkle-frail
As the skin on blood,
Salvias, that your father named you after,
Like blood lobbing from a gash,
And roses, the heart’s last gouts,
Catastrophic, arterial, doomed.
…
Your velvet long full skirt, a swathe of blood,
A lavish burgundy.
Your lips a dipped, deep crimson.
You revelled in red.
I felt it raw – like the crisp gauze edges
Of a stiffening wound. I could touch
The open vein in it, the crusted gleam.
…
Everything you painted you painted white
Then splashed it with roses, defeated it,
Leaned over it, dripping roses,
Weeping roses, and more roses,
Then sometimes, among them, a little bluebird.
…
Blue was better for you. Blue was wings.
Kingfisher blue silks from San Francisco
Folded your pregnancy
In crucible caresses.
Blue was your kindly spirit – not a ghoul
But electrified, a guardian, thoughtful.
…
In the pit of red
You hid from the bone-clinic whiteness.
…
But the jewel you lost was blue.
– Ted Hughes
——————————-
Damage
There is an internal landscape, a geography
of the soul; we search for its outlines all
our lives.
Those who are lucky enough to find it
ease like water over a stone, onto its fluid
contours, and are home.
Some find it in a place of their birth;
others may leave a seaside town, parched,
and find themselves refreshed in the
desert. There are those born in rolling
countryside who are really only at ease in
the intense and busy loneliness of the city.
For some, the search is for the imprint of
another; a child or a mother, a grandfather
or a brother, a lover, a husband, a wife,
or a foe.
We may go through our lives happy or
unhappy, successful or unfulfilled, loved
or unloved, without ever standing cold
with the shock of recognition, without
ever feeling the agony as the twisted iron
in our soul unlocks itself and we slip at
last into place.
– Josephine Hart
—————–
Which is worth more, a crowd of thousands,
or your own genuine solitude?
Freedom, or power over an entire nation?
A little while alone in your room
will prove more valuable than anything else
that could ever be given you.
– Rumi
——-
Keep walking, though there’s no place to get to.
Don’t try to see through the distances.
That’s not for human beings. Move within,
but don’t move the way fear makes you move.
– Rumi
——-
A thousand half-loves
must be forsaken to take
one whole heart home.
– Rumi
——-
FEAR
Everyone can see how they have polished the mirror
of the self, which is done with the longings
we’re given.
Not everyone wants to be king!
There are different roles and many choices
within each.
Troubles come. One person packs up
and leaves. Another stays and deepens in a love
for being human.
In battle, one runs fearing
for his life. Another, just as scared, turns
and fights more fiercely.
– Rumi
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