WARNING! We're mean. We're nasty. We're merciless. We're cruel. We're vile. We're heartless.
We'll slash your soul to ribbons. We're an evil clique conspiring to annihilate your self-esteem. Ready?


New to the PFFA? Read the Hot & Sexy Posting Guidelines and burrow through the Blurbs of Wisdom
 
Page 6 of 25 FirstFirst 123456789101116 ... LastLast
Results 76 to 90 of 362

Thread: Connect the Poem Version 3.

  1. #76
    Arun is offline Fun and felicitous PFFA patron
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    France
    Posts
    1,055
    Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror

    As Parmigianino did it, the right hand
    Bigger than the head, thrust at the viewer
    And swerving easily away, as though to protect
    What it advertises. A few leaded panes, old beams,
    Fur, pleated muslin, a coral ring run together
    In a movement supporting the face, which swims
    Toward and away like the hand
    Except that it is in repose. It is what is
    Sequestered. Vasari says, "Francesco one day set himself
    To take his own portrait, looking at himself from that purpose
    In a convex mirror, such as is used by barbers . . .
    He accordingly caused a ball of wood to be made
    By a turner, and having divided it in half and
    Brought it to the size of the mirror, he set himself
    With great art to copy all that he saw in the glass,"
    Chiefly his reflection, of which the portrait
    Is the reflection, of which the portrait
    Is the reflection once removed.
    The glass chose to reflect only what he saw
    Which was enough for his purpose: his image
    Glazed, embalmed, projected at a 180-degree angle.
    The time of day or the density of the light
    Adhering to the face keeps it
    Lively and intact in a recurring wave
    Of arrival. The soul establishes itself.
    But how far can it swim out through the eyes
    And still return safely to its nest? The surface
    Of the mirror being convex, the distance increases
    Significantly; that is, enough to make the point
    That the soul is a captive, treated humanely, kept
    In suspension, unable to advance much farther
    Than your look as it intercepts the picture.
    Pope Clement and his court were "stupefied"
    By it, according to Vasari, and promised a commission
    That never materialized. The soul has to stay where it is,
    Even though restless, hearing raindrops at the pane,
    The sighing of autumn leaves thrashed by the wind,
    Longing to be free, outside, but it must stay
    Posing in this place. It must move
    As little as possible. This is what the portrait says.
    But there is in that gaze a combination
    Of tenderness, amusement and regret, so powerful
    In its restraint that one cannot look for long.
    The secret is too plain. The pity of it smarts,
    Makes hot tears spurt: that the soul is not a soul,
    Has no secret, is small, and it fits
    Its hollow perfectly: its room, our moment of attention.
    That is the tune but there are no words.
    The words are only speculation
    (From the Latin speculum, mirror):
    They seek and cannot find the meaning of the music.
    We see only postures of the dream,
    Riders of the motion that swings the face
    Into view under evening skies, with no
    False disarray as proof of authenticity.
    But it is life englobed.
    One would like to stick one's hand
    Out of the globe, but its dimension,
    What carries it, will not allow it.
    No doubt it is this, not the reflex
    To hide something, which makes the hand loom large
    As it retreats slightly. There is no way
    To build it flat like a section of wall:
    It must join the segment of a circle,
    Roving back to the body of which it seems
    So unlikely a part, to fence in and shore up the face
    On which the effort of this condition reads
    Like a pinpoint of a smile, a spark
    Or star one is not sure of having seen
    As darkness resumes. A perverse light whose
    Imperative of subtlety dooms in advance its
    Conceit to light up: unimportant but meant.
    Francesco, your hand is big enough
    To wreck the sphere, and too big,
    One would think, to weave delicate meshes
    That only argue its further detention.
    (Big, but not coarse, merely on another scale,
    Like a dozing whale on the sea bottom
    In relation to the tiny, self-important ship
    On the surface.) But your eyes proclaim
    That everything is surface. The surface is what's there
    And nothing can exist except what's there.
    There are no recesses in the room, only alcoves,
    And the window doesn't matter much, or that
    Sliver of window or mirror on the right, even
    As a gauge of the weather, which in French is
    Le temps, the word for time, and which
    Follows a course wherein changes are merely
    Features of the whole. The whole is stable within
    Instability, a globe like ours, resting
    On a pedestal of vacuum, a ping-pong ball
    Secure on its jet of water.
    And just as there are no words for the surface, that is,
    No words to say what it really is, that it is not
    Superficial but a visible core, then there is
    No way out of the problem of pathos vs. experience.
    You will stay on, restive, serene in
    Your gesture which is neither embrace nor warning
    But which holds something of both in pure
    Affirmation that doesn't affirm anything.

    The balloon pops, the attention
    Turns dully away. Clouds
    In the puddle stir up into sawtoothed fragments.
    I think of the friends
    Who came to see me, of what yesterday
    Was like. A peculiar slant
    Of memory that intrudes on the dreaming model
    In the silence of the studio as he considers
    Lifting the pencil to the self-portrait.
    How many people came and stayed a certain time,
    Uttered light or dark speech that became part of you
    Like light behind windblown fog and sand,
    Filtered and influenced by it, until no part
    Remains that is surely you. Those voices in the dusk
    Have told you all and still the tale goes on
    In the form of memories deposited in irregular
    Clumps of crystals. Whose curved hand controls,
    Francesco, the turning seasons and the thoughts
    That peel off and fly away at breathless speeds
    Like the last stubborn leaves ripped
    From wet branches? I see in this only the chaos
    Of your round mirror which organizes everything
    Around the polestar of your eyes which are empty,
    Know nothing, dream but reveal nothing.
    I feel the carousel starting slowly
    And going faster and faster: desk, papers, books,
    Photographs of friends, the window and the trees
    Merging in one neutral band that surrounds
    Me on all sides, everywhere I look.
    And I cannot explain the action of leveling,
    Why it should all boil down to one
    Uniform substance, a magma of interiors.
    My guide in these matters is your self,
    Firm, oblique, accepting everything with the same
    Wraith of a smile, and as time speeds up so that it is soon
    Much later, I can know only the straight way out,
    The distance between us. Long ago
    The strewn evidence meant something,
    The small accidents and pleasures
    Of the day as it moved gracelessly on,
    A housewife doing chores. Impossible now
    To restore those properties in the silver blur that is
    The record of what you accomplished by sitting down
    "With great art to copy all that you saw in the glass"
    So as to perfect and rule out the extraneous
    Forever. In the circle of your intentions certain spars
    Remain that perpetuate the enchantment of self with self:
    Eyebeams, muslin, coral. It doesn't matter
    Because these are things as they are today
    Before one's shadow ever grew
    Out of the field into thoughts of tomorrow.

    Tomorrow is easy, but today is uncharted,
    Desolate, reluctant as any landscape
    To yield what are laws of perspective
    After all only to the painter's deep
    Mistrust, a weak instrument though
    Necessary. Of course some things
    Are possible, it knows, but it doesn't know
    Which ones. Some day we will try
    To do as many things as are possible
    And perhaps we shall succeed at a handful
    Of them, but this will not have anything
    To do with what is promised today, our
    Landscape sweeping out from us to disappear
    On the horizon. Today enough of a cover burnishes
    To keep the supposition of promises together
    In one piece of surface, letting one ramble
    Back home from them so that these
    Even stronger possibilities can remain
    Whole without being tested. Actually
    The skin of the bubble-chamber's as tough as
    Reptile eggs; everything gets "programmed" there
    In due course: more keeps getting included
    Without adding to the sum, and just as one
    Gets accustomed to a noise that
    Kept one awake but now no longer does,
    So the room contains this flow like an hourglass
    Without varying in climate or quality
    (Except perhaps to brighten bleakly and almost
    Invisibly, in a focus sharpening toward death--more
    Of this later). What should be the vacuum of a dream
    Becomes continually replete as the source of dreams
    Is being tapped so that this one dream
    May wax, flourish like a cabbage rose,
    Defying sumptuary laws, leaving us
    To awake and try to begin living in what
    Has now become a slum. Sydney Freedberg in his
    Parmigianino says of it: "Realism in this portrait
    No longer produces and objective truth, but a bizarria . . . .
    However its distortion does not create
    A feeling of disharmony . . . . The forms retain
    A strong measure of ideal beauty," because
    Fed by our dreams, so inconsequential until one day
    We notice the hole they left. Now their importance
    If not their meaning is plain. They were to nourish
    A dream which includes them all, as they are
    Finally reversed in the accumulating mirror.
    They seemed strange because we couldn't actually see them.
    And we realize this only at a point where they lapse
    Like a wave breaking on a rock, giving up
    Its shape in a gesture which expresses that shape.
    The forms retain a strong measure of ideal beauty
    As they forage in secret on our idea of distortion.
    Why be unhappy with this arrangement, since
    Dreams prolong us as they are absorbed?
    Something like living occurs, a movement
    Out of the dream into its codification.

    As I start to forget it
    It presents its stereotype again
    But it is an unfamiliar stereotype, the face
    Riding at anchor, issued from hazards, soon
    To accost others, "rather angel than man" (Vasari).
    Perhaps an angel looks like everything
    We have forgotten, I mean forgotten
    Things that don't seem familiar when
    We meet them again, lost beyond telling,
    Which were ours once. This would be the point
    Of invading the privacy of this man who
    "Dabbled in alchemy, but whose wish
    Here was not to examine the subtleties of art
    In a detached, scientific spirit: he wished through them
    To impart the sense of novelty and amazement to the spectator"
    (Freedberg). Later portraits such as the Uffizi
    "Gentleman," the Borghese "Young Prelate" and
    The Naples "Antea" issue from Mannerist
    Tensions, but here, as Freedberg points out,
    The surprise, the tension are in the concept
    Rather than its realization.
    The consonance of the High Renaissance
    Is present, though distorted by the mirror.
    What is novel is the extreme care in rendering
    The velleities of the rounded reflecting surface
    (It is the first mirror portrait),
    So that you could be fooled for a moment
    Before you realize the reflection
    Isn't yours. You feel then like one of those
    Hoffmann characters who have been deprived
    Of a reflection, except that the whole of me
    Is seen to be supplanted by the strict
    Otherness of the painter in his
    Other room. We have surprised him
    At work, but no, he has surprised us
    As he works. The picture is almost finished,
    The surprise almost over, as when one looks out,
    Startled by a snowfall which even now is
    Ending in specks and sparkles of snow.
    It happened while you were inside, asleep,
    And there is no reason why you should have
    Been awake for it, except that the day
    Is ending and it will be hard for you
    To get to sleep tonight, at least until late.

    The shadow of the city injects its own
    Urgency: Rome where Francesco
    Was at work during the Sack: his inventions
    Amazed the soldiers who burst in on him;
    They decided to spare his life, but he left soon after;
    Vienna where the painting is today, where
    I saw it with Pierre in the summer of 1959; New York
    Where I am now, which is a logarithm
    Of other cities. Our landscape
    Is alive with filiations, shuttlings;
    Business is carried on by look, gesture,
    Hearsay. It is another life to the city,
    The backing of the looking glass of the
    Unidentified but precisely sketched studio. It wants
    To siphon off the life of the studio, deflate
    Its mapped space to enactments, island it.
    That operation has been temporarily stalled
    But something new is on the way, a new preciosity
    In the wind. Can you stand it,
    Francesco? Are you strong enough for it?
    This wind brings what it knows not, is
    Self--propelled, blind, has no notion
    Of itself. It is inertia that once
    Acknowledged saps all activity, secret or public:
    Whispers of the word that can't be understood
    But can be felt, a chill, a blight
    Moving outward along the capes and peninsulas
    Of your nervures and so to the archipelagoes
    And to the bathed, aired secrecy of the open sea.
    This is its negative side. Its positive side is
    Making you notice life and the stresses
    That only seemed to go away, but now,
    As this new mode questions, are seen to be
    Hastening out of style. If they are to become classics
    They must decide which side they are on.
    Their reticence has undermined
    The urban scenery, made its ambiguities
    Look willful and tired, the games of an old man.
    What we need now is this unlikely
    Challenger pounding on the gates of an amazed
    Castle. Your argument, Francesco,
    Had begun to grow stale as no answer
    Or answers were forthcoming. If it dissolves now
    Into dust, that only means its time had come
    Some time ago, but look now, and listen:
    It may be that another life is stocked there
    In recesses no one knew of; that it,
    Not we, are the change; that we are in fact it
    If we could get back to it, relive some of the way
    It looked, turn our faces to the globe as it sets
    And still be coming out all right:
    Nerves normal, breath normal. Since it is a metaphor
    Made to include us, we are a part of it and
    Can live in it as in fact we have done,
    Only leaving our minds bare for questioning
    We now see will not take place at random
    But in an orderly way that means to menace
    Nobody--the normal way things are done,
    Like the concentric growing up of days
    Around a life: correctly, if you think about it.

    A breeze like the turning of a page
    Brings back your face: the moment
    Takes such a big bite out of the haze
    Of pleasant intuition it comes after.
    The locking into place is "death itself,"
    As Berg said of a phrase in Mahler's Ninth;
    Or, to quote Imogen in Cymbeline, "There cannot
    Be a pinch in death more sharp than this," for,
    Though only exercise or tactic, it carries
    The momentum of a conviction that had been building.
    Mere forgetfulness cannot remove it
    Nor wishing bring it back, as long as it remains
    The white precipitate of its dream
    In the climate of sighs flung across our world,
    A cloth over a birdcage. But it is certain that
    What is beautiful seems so only in relation to a specific
    Life, experienced or not, channeled into some form
    Steeped in the nostalgia of a collective past.
    The light sinks today with an enthusiasm
    I have known elsewhere, and known why
    It seemed meaningful, that others felt this way
    Years ago. I go on consulting
    This mirror that is no longer mine
    For as much brisk vacancy as is to be
    My portion this time. And the vase is always full
    Because there is only just so much room
    And it accommodates everything. The sample
    One sees is not to be taken as
    Merely that, but as everything as it
    May be imagined outside time--not as a gesture
    But as all, in the refined, assimilable state.
    But what is this universe the porch of
    As it veers in and out, back and forth,
    Refusing to surround us and still the only
    Thing we can see? Love once
    Tipped the scales but now is shadowed, invisible,
    Though mysteriously present, around somewhere.
    But we know it cannot be sandwiched
    Between two adjacent moments, that its windings
    Lead nowhere except to further tributaries
    And that these empty themselves into a vague
    Sense of something that can never be known
    Even though it seems likely that each of us
    Knows what it is and is capable of
    Communicating it to the other. But the look
    Some wear as a sign makes one want to
    Push forward ignoring the apparent
    NaÏveté of the attempt, not caring
    That no one is listening, since the light
    Has been lit once and for all in their eyes
    And is present, unimpaired, a permanent anomaly,
    Awake and silent. On the surface of it
    There seems no special reason why that light
    Should be focused by love, or why
    The city falling with its beautiful suburbs
    Into space always less clear, less defined,
    Should read as the support of its progress,
    The easel upon which the drama unfolded
    To its own satisfaction and to the end
    Of our dreaming, as we had never imagined
    It would end, in worn daylight with the painted
    Promise showing through as a gage, a bond.
    This nondescript, never-to-be defined daytime is
    The secret of where it takes place
    And we can no longer return to the various
    Conflicting statements gathered, lapses of memory
    Of the principal witnesses. All we know
    Is that we are a little early, that
    Today has that special, lapidary
    Todayness that the sunlight reproduces
    Faithfully in casting twig-shadows on blithe
    Sidewalks. No previous day would have been like this.
    I used to think they were all alike,
    That the present always looked the same to everybody
    But this confusion drains away as one
    Is always cresting into one's present.
    Yet the "poetic," straw-colored space
    Of the long corridor that leads back to the painting,
    Its darkening opposite--is this
    Some figment of "art," not to be imagined
    As real, let alone special? Hasn't it too its lair
    In the present we are always escaping from
    And falling back into, as the waterwheel of days
    Pursues its uneventful, even serene course?
    I think it is trying to say it is today
    And we must get out of it even as the public
    Is pushing through the museum now so as to
    Be out by closing time. You can't live there.
    The gray glaze of the past attacks all know-how:
    Secrets of wash and finish that took a lifetime
    To learn and are reduced to the status of
    Black-and-white illustrations in a book where colorplates
    Are rare. That is, all time
    Reduces to no special time. No one
    Alludes to the change; to do so might
    Involve calling attention to oneself
    Which would augment the dread of not getting out
    Before having seen the whole collection
    (Except for the sculptures in the basement:
    They are where they belong).
    Our time gets to be veiled, compromised
    By the portrait's will to endure. It hints at
    Our own, which we were hoping to keep hidden.
    We don't need paintings or
    Doggerel written by mature poets when
    The explosion is so precise, so fine.
    Is there any point even in acknowledging
    The existence of all that? Does it
    Exist? Certainly the leisure to
    Indulge stately pastimes doesn't,
    Any more. Today has no margins, the event arrives
    Flush with its edges, is of the same substance,
    Indistinguishable. "Play" is something else;
    It exists, in a society specifically
    Organized as a demonstration of itself.
    There is no other way, and those assholes
    Who would confuse everything with their mirror games
    Which seem to multiply stakes and possibilities, or
    At least confuse issues by means of an investing
    Aura that would corrode the architecture
    Of the whole in a haze of suppressed mockery,
    Are beside the point. They are out of the game,
    Which doesn't exist until they are out of it.
    It seems like a very hostile universe
    But as the principle of each individual thing is
    Hostile to, exists at the expense of all the others
    As philosophers have often pointed out, at least
    This thing, the mute, undivided present,
    Has the justification of logic, which
    In this instance isn't a bad thing
    Or wouldn't be, if the way of telling
    Didn't somehow intrude, twisting the end result
    Into a caricature of itself. This always
    Happens, as in the game where
    A whispered phrase passed around the room
    Ends up as something completely different.
    It is the principle that makes works of art so unlike
    What the artist intended. Often he finds
    He has omitted the thing he started out to say
    In the first place. Seduced by flowers,
    Explicit pleasures, he blames himself (though
    Secretly satisfied with the result), imagining
    He had a say in the matter and exercised
    An option of which he was hardly conscious,
    Unaware that necessity circumvents such resolutions.
    So as to create something new
    For itself, that there is no other way,
    That the history of creation proceeds according to
    Stringent laws, and that things
    Do get done in this way, but never the things
    We set out to accomplish and wanted so desperately
    To see come into being. Parmigianino
    Must have realized this as he worked at his
    Life-obstructing task. One is forced to read
    The perfectly plausible accomplishment of a purpose
    Into the smooth, perhaps even bland (but so
    Enigmatic) finish. Is there anything
    To be serious about beyond this otherness
    That gets included in the most ordinary
    Forms of daily activity, changing everything
    Slightly and profoundly, and tearing the matter
    Of creation, any creation, not just artistic creation
    Out of our hands, to install it on some monstrous, near
    Peak, too close to ignore, too far
    For one to intervene? This otherness, this
    "Not-being-us" is all there is to look at
    In the mirror, though no one can say
    How it came to be this way. A ship
    Flying unknown colors has entered the harbor.
    You are allowing extraneous matters
    To break up your day, cloud the focus
    Of the crystal ball. Its scene drifts away
    Like vapor scattered on the wind. The fertile
    Thought-associations that until now came
    So easily, appear no more, or rarely. Their
    Colorings are less intense, washed out
    By autumn rains and winds, spoiled, muddied,
    Given back to you because they are worthless.
    Yet we are such creatures of habit that their
    Implications are still around en permanence, confusing
    Issues. To be serious only about sex
    Is perhaps one way, but the sands are hissing
    As they approach the beginning of the big slide
    Into what happened. This past
    Is now here: the painter's
    Reflected face, in which we linger, receiving
    Dreams and inspirations on an unassigned
    Frequency, but the hues have turned metallic,
    The curves and edges are not so rich. Each person
    Has one big theory to explain the universe
    But it doesn't tell the whole story
    And in the end it is what is outside him
    That matters, to him and especially to us
    Who have been given no help whatever
    In decoding our own man-size quotient and must rely
    On second-hand knowledge. Yet I know
    That no one else's taste is going to be
    Any help, and might as well be ignored.
    Once it seemed so perfect--gloss on the fine
    Freckled skin, lips moistened as though about to part
    Releasing speech, and the familiar look
    Of clothes and furniture that one forgets.
    This could have been our paradise: exotic
    Refuge within an exhausted world, but that wasn't
    In the cards, because it couldn't have been
    The point. Aping naturalness may be the first step
    Toward achieving an inner calm
    But it is the first step only, and often
    Remains a frozen gesture of welcome etched
    On the air materializing behind it,
    A convention. And we have really
    No time for these, except to use them
    For kindling. The sooner they are burnt up
    The better for the roles we have to play.
    Therefore I beseech you, withdraw that hand,
    Offer it no longer as shield or greeting,
    The shield of a greeting, Francesco:
    There is room for one bullet in the chamber:
    Our looking through the wrong end
    Of the telescope as you fall back at a speed
    Faster than that of light to flatten ultimately
    Among the features of the room, an invitation
    Never mailed, the "it was all a dream"
    Syndrome, though the "all" tells tersely
    Enough how it wasn't. Its existence
    Was real, though troubled, and the ache
    Of this waking dream can never drown out
    The diagram still sketched on the wind,
    Chosen, meant for me and materialized
    In the disguising radiance of my room.
    We have seen the city; it is the gibbous
    Mirrored eye of an insect. All things happen
    On its balcony and are resumed within,
    But the action is the cold, syrupy flow
    Of a pageant. One feels too confined,
    Sifting the April sunlight for clues,
    In the mere stillness of the ease of its
    Parameter. The hand holds no chalk
    And each part of the whole falls off
    And cannot know it knew, except
    Here and there, in cold pockets
    Of remembrance, whispers out of time.

    -- John Ashbery

  2. #77
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    South Africa
    Posts
    1,777
    "My Last Duchess"

    That's my last Duchess painted on the wall,
    Looking as if she were alive. I call
    That piece a wonder, now: Fra Pandolf's hands
    Worked busily a day, and there she stands.
    Will't please you sit and look at her? I said
    "Fra Pandolf" by design, for never read
    Strangers like you that pictured countenance,
    The depth and passion of its earnest glance,
    But to myself they turned (since none puts by
    The curtain I have drawn for you, but I)
    And seemed as they would ask me, if they durst,
    How such a glance came there; so, not the first
    Are you to turn and ask thus. Sir, 'twas not
    Her husband's presence only, called that spot
    Of joy into the Duchess' cheek: perhaps
    Fra Pandolf chanced to say "Her mantle laps
    Over my lady's wrist too much," or "Paint
    Must never hope to reproduce the faint
    Half-flush that dies along her throat": such stuff
    Was courtesy, she thought, and cause enough
    For calling up that spot of joy. She had
    A heart---how shall I say?---too soon made glad,
    Too easily impressed; she liked whate'er
    She looked on, and her looks went everywhere.
    Sir, 'twas all one! My favour at her breast,
    The dropping of the daylight in the West,
    The bough of cherries some officious fool
    Broke in the orchard for her, the white mule
    She rode with round the terrace---all and each
    Would draw from her alike the approving speech,
    Or blush, at least. She thanked men,---good! but thanked
    Somehow---I know not how---as if she ranked
    My gift of a nine-hundred-years-old name
    With anybody's gift. Who'd stoop to blame
    This sort of trifling? Even had you skill
    In speech---(which I have not)---to make your will
    Quite clear to such an one, and say, "Just this
    Or that in you disgusts me; here you miss,
    Or there exceed the mark"---and if she let
    Herself be lessoned so, nor plainly set
    Her wits to yours, forsooth, and made excuse,
    ---E'en then would be some stooping; and I choose
    Never to stoop. Oh sir, she smiled, no doubt,
    Whene'er I passed her; but who passed without
    Much the same smile? This grew; I gave commands;
    Then all smiles stopped together. There she stands
    As if alive. Will't please you rise? We'll meet
    The company below, then. I repeat,
    The Count your master's known munificence
    Is ample warrant that no just pretence
    Of mine for dowry will be disallowed;
    Though his fair daughter's self, as I avowed
    At starting, is my object. Nay, we'll go
    Together down, sir. Notice Neptune, though,
    Taming a sea-horse, thought a rarity,
    Which Claus of Innsbruck cast in bronze for me!

    by Robert Browning
    Poetry is ordinary language to the Nth power - Paul Engle

  3. #78
    HowardM2 is offline The little guy behind the curtain
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Posts
    39,489
    "Four Cut Sunflowers, One Upside Down"

    Turbulent stasis on a blue ground.

    What is any art but static flame?
    Fire of spun gold, grain.

    This brilliant flickering's

    arrested by named (Naples,
    chrome, cadmium) and nameless

    yellows, tawny golds. Look

    at the ochre sprawl -- how
    they sprawl, these odalisques,

    withering coronas
    around the seedheads' intricate precision.

    Even drying, the petals curling
    into licks of fire,

    they're haloed in the pure rush of light
    yellow is. One theory of color,

    before Newton broke the world
    through the prism's planes

    and nailed the primaries to the wheel,
    posited that everything's made of yellow

    and blue -- coastal colors
    which engender, in their coupling,

    every other hue, so tht the world's
    an elaborated dialogue

    between citron and Prussian blue.
    They are a whole summer to themselves.

    They are a nocture
    in argent and gold, and they burn

    with the ferocity
    of dying (which is to say, the luminosity

    of what's living hardest). Is it a human soul
    the painter's poured

    into them -- thin, beleagured old word,
    but what else to call it?

    Evening is overtaking them.
    In this last light they are voracious.

    --Mark Doty
    "Poetry is not a code to be broken but a way of seeing with the eyes shut." -- Linda Pastan

  4. #79
    TanyaLS is offline Over here, in the hydrangea bush.
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    BC Canada
    Posts
    5,190
    Something Whispered in the Shakuhachi


    No one knew the secret of my flutes,
    and I laugh now
    because some said
    I was enlightened.
    But the truth is
    I'm only a gardener
    who before the War
    was a dirt farmer and learned
    how to grow the bamboo
    in ditches next to the fields,
    how to leave things alone
    and let the silt build up
    until it was deep enough to stink
    bad as night soil, bad
    as the long, witch-grey
    hair of a ghost.

    No secret in that.

    My land was no good, rocky,
    and so dry I had to sneak
    water from the whites,
    hacksaw the locks off the chutes at night,
    and blame Mexicans, Filipinos,
    or else some wicked spirit
    of a migrant, murdered in his sleep
    by sheriffs and wanting revenge.
    Even though they never believed me,
    it didn't matter--no witnesses,
    and my land was never thick with rice,
    only the bamboo
    growing lush as old melodies
    and whispering like brush strokes
    against the fine scroll of wind.

    I found some string in the shed
    or else took a few stalks
    and stripped off their skins,
    wove the fibers, the floss,
    into cords I could bind
    around the feet, ankles, and throats
    of only the best bamboos.
    I used an ice pick for an awl,
    a fish knife to carve finger holes,
    and a scythe to shape the mouthpiece.

    I had my flutes.



    *



    When the War came,
    I told myself I lost nothing.

    My land, which was barren,
    was not actually mine but leased
    (we could not own property)
    and the shacks didn't matter.

    What did were the power lines nearby
    and that sabotage was suspected.

    What mattered to me
    were the flutes I burned
    in a small fire
    by the bath house.

    All through Relocation,
    in the desert where they put us,
    at night when the stars talked
    and the sky came down
    and drummed against the mesas,
    I could hear my flutes
    wail like fists of wind
    whistling through the barracks.
    I came out of Camp,
    a blanket slung over my shoulder,
    found land next to this swamp,
    planted strawberries and beanplants,
    planted the dwarf pines and tended them,
    got rich enough to quit
    and leave things alone,
    let the ditches clog with silt again
    and the bamboo grow thick as history.



    *



    So, when it's bad now,
    when I can't remember what's lost
    and all I have for the world to take
    means nothing,
    I go out back of the greenhouse
    at the far end of my land
    where the grasses go wild
    and the arroyos come up
    with cat's-claw and giant dahlias,
    where the children of my neighbors
    consult with the wise heads
    of sunflowers, huge against the sky,
    where the rivers of weather
    and the charred ghosts of old melodies
    converge to flood my land
    and sustain the one thicket
    of memory that calls for me
    to come and sit
    among the tall canes
    and shape full-throated songs
    out of wind, out of bamboo,
    out of a voice
    that only whispers.


    --Garrett Hongo

  5. #80
    HowardM2 is offline The little guy behind the curtain
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Posts
    39,489
    "Dream of a Trumpet"

    I've been dreaming
    of an orange trumpet
    that shines through its wrappings
    of velvet cloth,
    that smells of polish and whale oil
    as its brass keys
    pump up and down,
    lazily, like carousel ponies
    in a carnival
    stopped for the night
    in my neighborhood park.
    Calliope music mingles,
    swirls with the surflike thrash
    of freeways not far off,
    and I can make out
    the hissing of compressors
    and the deep, hydraulic
    grind of a Ferris wheel
    turning slowly in its orbit
    around my sleep.
    All this and gaudy constellations
    of neon and old Christmas lights
    strung through dime-pitch booths,
    the shooting gallery, and Pepsi stand,
    echoes an embroidery of lilies,
    pale blue and white,
    on the kimono my mother wears
    as she dances in a slow circle
    around the fair and its crowd.
    She holds her fan up.
    It blooms like a flower
    on the long stalk of her arm
    and she gestures
    with a toss of her head
    towards paper lanterns
    pitching in a light breeze
    along the eaves of the church
    that has just appeared.
    Suddenly, I know
    it is Bon-Odori,
    the Festival for the Dead,
    and half of Gardena
    is dancing in the four streets
    around the Buddhist Temple,
    and the music I hear
    is an old swing band
    playing showtunes and ondos from Japan.
    The trumpet blares,
    and I can tell
    that the man who plays it
    will never care
    whether the notes he makes
    will survive him
    or scatter in fragments of light
    splashing across my face
    as I turn in my sleep
    and grumble something almost audible.

    -- Garrett Hongo
    "Poetry is not a code to be broken but a way of seeing with the eyes shut." -- Linda Pastan

  6. #81
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    New York, NY
    Posts
    7,044
    "Reasons for Attendance"

    The trumpet's voice, loud and authoritative,
    Draws me a moment to the lighted glass
    To watch the dancers - all under twenty-five -
    Solemnly on the beat of happiness.

    - Or so I fancy, sensing the smoke and sweat,
    The wonderful feel of girls. Why be out there ?
    But then, why be in there? Sex, yes, but what
    Is sex ? Surely to think the lion's share
    Of happiness is found by couples - sheer

    Inaccuracy, as far as I'm concerned.
    What calls me is that lifted, rough-tongued bell
    (Art, if you like) whose individual sound
    Insists I too am individual.
    It speaks; I hear; others may hear as well,

    But not for me, nor I for them; and so
    With happiness. Therefor I stay outside,
    Believing this, and they maul to and fro,
    Believing that; and both are satisfied,
    If no one has misjudged himself. Or lied.

    --Philip Larkin

  7. #82
    Arun is offline Fun and felicitous PFFA patron
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    France
    Posts
    1,055
    Lying

    To claim, at a dead party, to have spotted a grackle,
    When in fact you haven't of late, can do no harm.
    Your reputation for saying things of interest
    Will not be marred, if you hasten to other topics,
    Nor will the delicate web of human trust
    Be ruptured by that airy fabrication.
    Later, however, talking with toxic zest
    Of golf, or taxes, or the rest of it
    Where the beaked ladle plies the chuckling ice,
    You may enjoy a chill of severance, hearing
    Above your head the shrug of unreal wings.
    Not that the world is tiresome in itself:
    We know what boredom is: it is a dull
    Impatience or a fierce velleity,
    A champing wish, stalled by our lassitude,
    To make or do. In the strict sense, of course,
    We invent nothing, merely bearing witness
    To what each morning brings again to light:
    Gold crosses, cornices, astonishment
    Of panes, the turbine-vent which natural law
    Spins on the grill-end of the diner's roof,
    Then grass and grackles or, at the end of town
    In sheen-swept pastureland, the horse's neck
    Clothed with its usual thunder, and the stones
    Beginning now to tug their shadows in
    And track the air with glitter. All these things
    Are there before us; there to be seen or not
    By us, as by the bee's twelve thousand eyes,
    According to our means and purposes.
    So too with strangeness not to be ignored,
    Total eclipse or snow upon the rose,
    And so with that most rare conception, nothing.
    What is it, after all, but something missed?
    It is the water of a dried-up well
    Gone to assail the cliffs of Labrador.
    There is what galled the arch-negator, sprung
    From Hell to probe with intellectual sight
    The cells and heavens of a given world
    Which he could take but as another prison:
    Small wonder that, pretending not to be,
    He drifted through the bar-like boles of Eden
    In a black mist low creeping, dragging down
    And darkening with moody self-absorption
    What, when he left it, lifted and, if seen
    From the sun's vantage, seethed with vaulting hues.
    Closer to making than the deftest fraud
    Is seeing how the catbird's tail was made
    To counterpoise, on the mock-orange spray,
    Its light, up-tilted spine; or, lighter still,
    How the shucked tunic of an onion, brushed
    To one side on a backlit chopping-board
    And rocked by trifling currents, prints and prints
    Its bright, ribbed shadow like a flapping sail.
    Odd that a thing is most itself when likened:
    The eye mists over, basil hints of clove,
    The river glazes toward the dam and spills
    To the drubbed rocks below its crashing cullet,
    And in the barnyard near the sawdust-pile
    Some great thing is tormented. Either it is
    A tarp torn loose and in the groaning wind
    Now puffed, now flattened, or a hip-shot beast
    Which tries again, and once again, to rise.
    What, though for pain there is no other word,
    Finds pleasure in the cruellest simile?
    It is something in us like the catbird's song
    From neighbor bushes in the grey of morning
    That, harsh or sweet, and of its own accord,
    Proclaims its many kin. It is a chant
    Of the first springs, and it is tributary
    To the great lies told with the eyes half-shut
    That have the truth in view: the tale of Chiron
    Who, with sage head, wild heart, and planted hoof
    Instructed brute Achilles in the lyre,
    Or of the garden where we first mislaid
    Simplicity of wish and will, forgetting
    Out of what cognate splendor all things came
    To take their scattering names; and nonetheless
    That matter of a baggage-train surprised
    By a few Gascons in the Pyrenees
    Which, having worked three centuries and more
    In the dark caves of France, poured out at last
    The blood of Roland, who to Charles his king
    And to the dove that hatched the dove-tailed world
    Was faithful unto death, and shamed the Devil.

    - Richard Wilbur

  8. #83
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    New York, NY
    Posts
    7,044
    "God and the Devil"

    God and the Devil
    Were talking one day
    Ages and ages of years ago.
    God said: Suppose
    Things were fashioned this way,
    Well then, so and so.
    The Devil said: No,
    Prove it if you can.
    So God created Man
    and that is how it all began.
    It has continued now for many a year
    And sometimes it seems more than we can bear.
    But why should bowels yearn and cheeks grow pale?
    We're here to point a moral and adorn a tale.

    --Stevie Smith

  9. #84
    HowardM2 is offline The little guy behind the curtain
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Posts
    39,489
    "The Knight, Death, and the Devil"

    Cowhorn-crowned, shockheaded, cornshuck-bearded,
    Death is a scarecrow -- his death's-head a teetotum
    That tilts up toward man confidentially
    But trimmed with adders; ringlet-maned, rope-bridled,
    The mare he rides crops herbs beside a skull.
    He holds up, warning, the crossed cones of time:
    Here, narrowing into now, the Past and Future
    Are quicksand.
    . . . . . . . . . . A hoofed pikeman trots behind.
    His pike's claw-hammer mocks -- in duplicate, inverted --
    The pocked, ribbed, soaring crescent of his horn.
    A scapegoat aged into a steer; boar-snouted;
    His great limp ears stuck sidelong out in air;
    A dewlap bunched at his breast; a ram's-horn wound
    Beneath each ear; a spur licked up and out
    From the hide of his forehead; bat-wingerd, but in bone;
    His eye a ring inside a ring inside a ring
    That leers up, joyless, vile, in meek obscenity --
    This is the devil. flesh to flesh, he bleats
    The herd back to the pit of being.

    In fluted mail; upon his lance the bush
    Of that old fox; a sheep-dog bounding at his stirrup,
    In its eyes the cast of faithfulness (our help,
    Our foolish help); his dun war-horse pacing
    Beneath in strength, in ceremonious magnificence;
    His castle -- some man's castle -- set on every crag:
    S, companioned so, the knight moves through this world.
    The fiend moos in amity, Death mouths, reminding:
    He listens in assurance, has no glance
    To spare for them, but looks past steadily
    At -- at --
    . . . . . . . . . . a man's look completes itself.

    The death of his own flesh, set up outside him;
    The flesh of his own soul, set up outside him --
    Death and the devil, what are these to him?
    His being accuses him -- and yet his face is firm
    In resolution, in absolute persistence;
    The folds of smiling do for steadiness;
    The face is its own fate -- a man does what he must --
    And the body underneath it says: I am.

    --Randall Jarrell
    "Poetry is not a code to be broken but a way of seeing with the eyes shut." -- Linda Pastan

  10. #85
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    New York, NY
    Posts
    7,044
    from "The Canterbury Tales: The General Prologue"

    43 A knyght ther was, and that a worthy man,
    44 That fro the tyme that he first bigan
    45 To riden out, he loved chivalrie,
    46 Trouthe and honour, fredom and curteisie.
    47 Ful worthy was he in his lordes werre,
    48 And therto hadde he riden, no man ferre,
    49 As wel in Cristendom as in Hethenesse,
    50 And evere honoured for his worthynesse.
    51 At Alisaundre he was, whan it was wonne;
    52 Ful ofte tyme he hadde the bord bigonne
    53 Aboven alle nacions in Pruce;
    54 In Lettow hadde he reysed, and in Ruce,
    55 No cristen man so ofte of his degree.
    56 In Gernade at the seege eek hadde he be
    57 Of Algezir, and riden in Belmarye;
    58 At Lyeys was he, and at Satalye,
    59 Whan they were wonne; and in the Grete See
    60 At many a noble arive hadde he be.
    61 At mortal batailles hadde he been fiftene,
    62 And foughten for oure feith at Tramyssene
    63 In lystes thries, and ay slayn his foo.
    64 This ilke worthy knyght hadde been also
    65 Somtyme with the lord of Palatye
    66 Agayn another hethen in Turkye,
    67 And everemoore he hadde a sovereyn prys.
    68 And though that he were worthy, he was wys,
    69 And of his port as meeke as is a mayde;
    70 He nevere yet no vileynye ne sayde
    71 In al his lyf unto no maner wight;
    72 He was a verray parfit gentil knyght.
    73 But for to tellen yow of his array,
    74 His hors weren goode, but he was nat gay.
    75 Of fustian he wered a gypoun,
    76 Al bismotered with his habergeoun;
    77 For he was late ycome from his viage,
    78 And wente for to doon his pilgrymage.

    --Geoffrey Chaucer

  11. #86
    HowardM2 is offline The little guy behind the curtain
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Posts
    39,489
    "Two Versions of 'Knight, Death, and the Devil'"

    I
    Under the unreal helmet the severe
    Profile is cruel like the cruel sword
    Waiting, poised. Through the stripped forest
    Rides the horse unperturbed.
    Clumsily, furtively, the obscene mob
    Closes in on him: the Devil with servile
    Eyes, the labyrinthine reptiles
    And the ashen old man with the hourglass.
    Iron rider, whoever looks at you
    Knows that in you neither the lie
    Nor pale fear dwells. Your hard fate
    Is to command and offend. You are brave
    And you are certainly not unworthy,
    German, of the Devil and of Death.

    II
    There are two roads. That of the man
    Of iron and arrogance, who rides,
    Firm in his faith, between the ta8nts and the rigid
    Dance of the Devil with Death,
    And the other, the short one, mine. In what vanished
    Long-ago night or morning did my eyes
    Discover the fantastic epic,
    The enduring dream of Durer,
    The hero and the mob with all its shadows
    Searching me out, and catching me in ambush?
    It is me, and not the paladin, whom the hoary
    Old man crowned with sinuous snakes
    Is warning. The future's water clock
    Measures my time, not his eternal now.
    I am the one who will be ashes and darkness;
    I, who set out later, will have reached
    My mortal destination; you, who do not exist,
    You, rider of the raised sword
    And the rigid woods, your pace
    Will keep on goiong as long as there are men.
    Composed, imaginary, eternal.

    --Jorge Luis Borges
    (translated by Stephen Kessler)
    "Poetry is not a code to be broken but a way of seeing with the eyes shut." -- Linda Pastan

  12. #87
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    New York, NY
    Posts
    7,044
    TWO roads diverged in a yellow wood,
    And sorry I could not travel both
    And be one traveler, long I stood
    And looked down one as far as I could
    To where it bent in the undergrowth;

    Then took the other, as just as fair,
    And having perhaps the better claim,
    Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
    Though as for that the passing there
    Had worn them really about the same,

    And both that morning equally lay
    In leaves no step had trodden black.
    Oh, I kept the first for another day!
    Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
    I doubted if I should ever come back.

    I shall be telling this with a sigh
    Somewhere ages and ages hence:
    Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
    I took the one less traveled by,
    And that has made all the difference.

    --Robert Frost

  13. #88
    HowardM2 is offline The little guy behind the curtain
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Posts
    39,489
    "To Have To"

    is an odd infinitive, in which
    compulsion and possission meet
    and share a word together.

    Both propose, and both accept;
    to have, because it wants to hold;
    have to, because it has no will.

    But then there is
    no part or present, either:
    coming's going, in this match.

    It's odd because they're two at one
    but endless, in the end, in their
    capacity to be attached . . .

    --Heather McHugh
    "Poetry is not a code to be broken but a way of seeing with the eyes shut." -- Linda Pastan

  14. #89
    Arun is offline Fun and felicitous PFFA patron
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    France
    Posts
    1,055
    And So

    And so you call your best friend
    who's away, just to hear his voice,
    but forget his recording concludes
    with "Have a nice day."

    "Thank you, but I have other plans,"
    you're always tempted to respond,
    as an old lady once did, the clerk
    in the liquor store unable to laugh.

    Always tempted, what a sad
    combination of words. And so
    you take a walk into the neighborhood,
    where the rhododendrons are out
    and also some yellowy things

    and the lilacs remind you of a song
    by Nina Simone. "Where's my love?"
    is its refrain. Up near Gravel Hill
    two fidgety deer cross the road,
    white tails, exactly where

    the week before a red fox
    made a more confident dash.
    Now and then the world rewards,
    and so you make your way back

    past the careful lawns, the drowsy backyards,
    knowing the soul on its own
    is helpless, asleep in the hollows
    of its rigging, waiting to be stirred.

    - Stephen Dunn

  15. #90
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    New York, NY
    Posts
    7,044
    "Reading Someone Else's Love Poems"

    is, after all, all we've ever done
    for centuries--except write them--but what
    a strange thing it is, after all, rose-cheeks and sun-
    hair and lips, and underarms, and that little gut
    I love to nuzzle on, soft underbelly--oops--
    that wasn't what I meant to talk about;
    ever since handkerchiefs fell, and hoop-
    skirts around ankles swirled
    and smiled, lovers have dreamed their loves upon
    the pages, courted and schemed and twirled
    and styled, hoping that once they'd unfurled their down-
    deep longings, they would have their prize--
    not the songs of love, but love beneath disguise.

    --Kate Light

Page 6 of 25 FirstFirst 123456789101116 ... LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •