POETRY IS LIKE TAKING A DEEP BREATH

Friday, 22 October 2010

BE NOT AFEARD: THIS ISLE IS FULL OF NOISES





Be not afeard: this isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight, and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears; and sometimes voices,
That, if I then had waked after long sleep,
Will make me sleep again; and then, in dreaming,
The clouds methought would open and show riches
Ready to drop upon me; that, when I waked
I cried to dream again.


Shakespeare



From The Tempest
Act 3 Scene 2

Tuesday, 19 October 2010

ANGER LAY BY ME ALL NIGHT LONG


Charles Le Brun
French Painter 1619-1690



Anger lay by me all night long,
His breath was hot upon my brow,
He told me of my burning wrong,
All night he talked and would not go.

He stood by me all through the day,
Struck from my hand the book, the pen;
He said; " Hear first, what I've to say,
And sing, if you've the heart to, then.

And can I cast him from my couch?
And can I lock him from my room?
Ah no, his honest words are such
That he's my True-Lord, and my doom.


Elizabeth Daryush
1887-1977


Saturday, 16 October 2010

THE TOURISTS

Carl Spitzweg
1808-1885
19th Century English Tourist in the Roman Campagna


Arriving was their passion,
Into the new place out of the blue
Flying, sailing, driving - 
How well these veteran tourists knew
Each fashion of arriving.

Leaving a place behind them,
There was no sense of loss; they fed
Upon the act of leaving -
So hot their hearts for the land ahead -
As a kind of pre-conceiving.

Arrival has stern laws, though,
Condemning men to lose their eyes
If they have treated travel
As a brief necessary disease,
A pause before arrival.

And merciless the fate is 
Of him who leaves nothing behind,
No hostage, no reversion;
He travels on, not only blind
But a stateless person.

Fleeing from love and hate,
Pursuing change, consumed by motion,
Such arrivistes, unseeing,
Forfeit through endless self-evasion
The estate of simple being.



C. Day Lewis
1904-1972
Poet Laureate


Tuesday, 12 October 2010

ALMANAC



Robert Rauschenberg
Almanac



The indifferent rivers 
Will keep on flowing to the sea
Or ruinously overflowing dikes,
Ancient handiwork of determined men.
The glaciers will continue to grate,
Smoothing what's under them
Or suddenly fall headlong,
Cutting short fir trees' lives.
The sea, captive between
Two continents, will go on struggling,
Always miserly with its riches.
Sun stars planets and comets
Will continue on their course.
Earth too will fear the immutable
Laws of the universe.
Not us. We, rebellious progeny
With great brainpower, little sense,
Will destroy, defile
Always more feverishly.
Very soon we'll extend the desert
Into the Amazonian forests,
Into the living heart of our cities,
Into our very hearts.


Primo Levi
1919-1987

translated from the Italian by Ruth Feldman


Sunday, 10 October 2010

SOMETIMES IT HAPPENS


The Fountain of Indolence
J.M.W. Turner
British  Painter 1775-1851


And sometimes it happens that you are friends and then
You are not friends,
And friendship has passed.
And whole days are lost and among them
A fountain empties itself.

And sometimes it happens that you are loved and then
You are not loved,
And love is past.
And whole days are lost and among them
A fountain empties itself into the grass.

And sometimes you want to speak to her and then
You do not want to speak,
Then the opportunity has passed.
Your dreams flare up, they suddenly vanish.

And also it happens that there is nowhere to go and then
There is somewhere to go,
Then you have bypassed.
And the years flare up and are gone,
Quicker than a minute.

So you have nothing.
You wonder if these things matter and then
As soon as you begin to wonder if these things matter
They cease to matter,
And caring is past.
And a fountain empties itself into the grass.


Brian Patten
born February 1946



Tuesday, 5 October 2010

WANTS




Beyond all this, the wish to be alone;
However the sky grows dark with invitation-cards
However we follow the printed directions of sex
However the family is photographed under the flagstaff - 
Beyond all this, the wish to be alone.

Beneath it all, desire of oblivion runs;
despite the artful tensions of the calendar,
The life insurance, the tabled fertility rites,
The costly aversion of the eyes from death -
Beneath it all, desire of oblivion runs.


Philip Larkin
1922-1985


Friday, 1 October 2010

NURSERY RHYME OF INNOCENCE AND EXPERIENCE


I had a silver penny
And an apricot tree
And I said to the sailor
On the white quay

'Sailor o sailor
will you bring me
If I give you my penny
And my apricot tree

A fez from Algeria
An Arab drum to beat
A little gilt sword
And a parakeet?'

  And he smiled and he kissed me
  as strong as death
  And I saw his red tongue
  And I felt his sweet breath.


''You may keep your penny
And your apricot tree
And I'll bring your presents
Back from the sea.'


O the ship dipped down
On the rim of the sky
And I waited while three
Long summers went by.

Then one steel morning
On the white quay
I saw a grey ship
come in from the sea.



Slowly she came
Across the bay
For her flashing rigging
Was shot away

All round her wake
The seabirds cried
And flew in and out
Of the hole in her side

Slowly she came
In the path of the sun
And I heard the sound
Of a distant gun

And a stranger came running
up to me
From the deck of the ship
And he said, said he



'O are you the boy
Who would wait on the quay
With the silver penny
And the apricot tree?

I've a plum coloured fez
And a drum for thee
And a sword and a parakeet
From over the sea.'


'O where is the sailor
With bold red hair?
And what is that volley
On the bright air?

O where are the other 
Girls and boys?
And why have you brought me
Children's toys?




Charles Causley
1917-2003