Poetry

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Padraig
    Full Member
    • Feb 2013
    • 4236

    Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
    Mrs C's been reading up on archaeology for her course and came across this poem by Auden which I fair enjoyed.

    Archaeology

    The archaeologist's spade
    delves into dwellings
    vacancied long ago,

    unearthing evidence
    of life-ways no one
    would dream of leading now,

    concerning which he has not much
    to say that he can prove:
    the lucky man!
    ...

    W. H. Auden
    Another point of view where the poet observes the results of a dig and considers the relevance to his times.


    Punishment

    I can feel the tug
    of the halter at the nape
    of her neck, the wind
    on her naked front.

    It blows her nipples
    to amber beads,
    it shakes the frail rigging
    of her ribs.

    I can see her drowned
    body in the bog,
    the weighing stone
    the floating rods and boughs.

    Under which at first
    she was a barked sapling
    that is dug up
    oak-bone, brain-firkin;

    her shaved head
    like a stubble of black corn,
    her blindfold a soiled bandage,
    her noose a ring

    to store
    the memories of love.
    Little adulteress,
    before they punished you

    you were flaxen-haired,
    undernourished, and your
    tar-black face was beautiful.
    My poor scapegoat,

    I almost love you
    but would have cast, I know,
    the stones of silence.
    I am the artful voyeur

    of your brain's exposed
    and darkened combs,
    your muscles' webbing
    and all your numbered bones;

    I who have stood dumb
    when your betraying sisters,
    cauled in tar,
    wept by the railings,

    who would connive
    in civilized outrage
    yet understanding the exact
    and tribal, intimate revenge.

    Seamus Heaney North 1975

    Comment

    • Tevot
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 1011

      Many thanks Padraig for sharing "Punishment". I've never read it before or "North" for that matter although I have read about it if you know what I mean...and indeed my mother's family came from there ... Unionists.

      The killer stanza.. at the end imho... culminating with "exact and tribal, intimate revenge..."

      Can we ever learn ?

      Best Wishes,

      Tevot

      Comment

      • Padraig
        Full Member
        • Feb 2013
        • 4236

        Originally posted by Tevot View Post
        Many thanks Padraig for sharing "Punishment". I've never read it before or "North" for that matter although I have read about it if you know what I mean...and indeed my mother's family came from there ... Unionists.

        The killer stanza.. at the end imho... culminating with "exact and tribal, intimate revenge..."

        Can we ever learn ?

        Best Wishes,

        Tevot
        I'm not sure what you are saying we can learn, Tevot, from your quote...
        but does it make a difference if you include the words 'understanding the' before it?

        See the Heaney thread for other news.

        Comment

        • johncorrigan
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 10358

          Thanks for 'the Bittern', Padraig and the songs elsewhere. I'm still dipping away in the world of Mary Oliver. Here's a tale about a Turtle.

          Turtle

          Now I see it--
          it nudges with its bulldog head
          the slippery stems of the lilies, making them tremble;
          and now it noses along in the wake of the little brown teal

          who is leading her soft children
          from one side of the pond to the other; she keeps
          close to the edge
          and they follow closely, the good children--

          the tender children,
          the sweet children, dangling their pretty feet
          into the darkness.
          And now will come--I can count on it--the murky splash,

          the certain victory
          of that pink and gassy mouth, and the frantic
          circling of the hen while the rest of the chicks
          flare away over the water and into the reeds, and my heart

          will be most mournful
          on their account. But, listen,
          what's important?
          Nothing's important

          except that the great and cruel mystery of the world,
          of which this is a part,
          not to be denied. Once,
          I happened to see, on a city street, in summer,

          a dusty, fouled turtle plodded along--
          a snapper--
          broken out I suppose from some backyard cage--
          and I knew what I had to do--

          I looked it right in the eyes, and I caught it--
          I put it, like a small mountain range,
          into a knapsack, and I took it out
          of the city, and I let it

          down into the dark pond, into
          the cool water,
          and the light of the lilies,
          to live.

          Mary Oliver (from House of Light)

          Comment

          • Padraig
            Full Member
            • Feb 2013
            • 4236

            Aww!

            But of course the poem puts some questions to you, doesn't it? I once saw a pike take a duckling in the same way as that turtle. At that time, I was 8 or 9, I hated the pike and imagined what horrors I would do to it if I caught it. I didn't succeed in catching a pike until years and years later. What did I do? I put it back.
            I don't think I would have journeyed back to that memory, John, had it not been for Mary Oliver's lyrically searching poem.

            Comment

            • johncorrigan
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 10358

              Originally posted by Padraig View Post
              Aww!

              But of course the poem puts some questions to you, doesn't it? I once saw a pike take a duckling in the same way as that turtle. At that time, I was 8 or 9, I hated the pike and imagined what horrors I would do to it if I caught it. I didn't succeed in catching a pike until years and years later. What did I do? I put it back.
              I don't think I would have journeyed back to that memory, John, had it not been for Mary Oliver's lyrically searching poem.
              Know what you mean, Padraig. Last year I was taking some young folk around as part of a photography project to a couple of local beauty spots. As we approached a pond we saw lots of mallards. 'Awwws' rang out from all, even more when I pointed out a moorhen with its tiny moorhenlings zipping across the ponds. Cue even bigger 'Awwwwws!' Suddenly a gull swooped down, took the hindmost, tossed it up in the air and down it went in a oner! Cue 'AAAARRRRGGGGHHHHs' from my young company. Never got a photo of it mind you, any of them. Sad it was and yet I was quite in 'Awe' of the gull's style...it's nature, I suppose...a gull eat chick world sometimes.
              I like Mary Oliver's take on the natural world very much. Here's a poem called the Pinewoods
              The Pine Woods

              Just before dawn
              three deer
              came walking
              down the hill

              as if the moment were nothing different
              from eternity--
              as lightly as that
              they nibbled

              the leaves,
              they drank
              from the pond,
              their pretty mouths

              sucking the loose silver,
              their heavy eyes
              shining.
              Listen,

              I did not really see them.
              I came later and saw their tracks
              on empty sand.
              But I don't believe

              only to the edge
              of what my eyes actually see
              in the kindness of the morning,
              do you?

              And my life,
              which is my body surely,
              is also something more--
              isn't yours?

              I suppose the deer waited
              to see the sun lift itself up,
              filling the hills with light and shadows--
              they were leaping

              back into the rough, uncharted pinewoods
              where I have lived so much of my life,
              where everything is so quick and uncertain,
              so glancing, so improbable, so real.

              Mary Oliver
              Last edited by johncorrigan; 19-05-16, 20:03.

              Comment

              • DracoM
                Host
                • Mar 2007
                • 12969

                If I hear Ian Macmillan again on R3, am I allowed to scream?

                Comment

                • johncorrigan
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 10358

                  Originally posted by DracoM View Post
                  If I hear Ian Macmillan again on R3, am I allowed to scream?
                  Is he swallowing a duckling, DracoM?

                  Comment

                  • Padraig
                    Full Member
                    • Feb 2013
                    • 4236

                    Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                    Is he swallowing a duckling, DracoM?
                    Duck, John! Sniper at work.

                    Comment

                    • johncorrigan
                      Full Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 10358

                      My Daughter and Apple Pie


                      She serves me a piece of it a few minutes
                      out of the oven. A little steam rises
                      from the slits on top. Sugar and spice -
                      cinnamon - burned into the crust.
                      But she's wearing these dark glasses
                      in the kitchen at ten o'clock
                      in the morning - everything nice -
                      as she watches me break off
                      a piece, bring it to my mouth,
                      and blow on it. My daughter's kitchen,
                      in winter. I fork the pie in
                      and tell myself to stay out of it.
                      She says she loves him. No way
                      could it be worse.

                      Raymond Carver

                      Comment

                      • Padraig
                        Full Member
                        • Feb 2013
                        • 4236

                        Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                        My Daughter and Apple Pie


                        She serves me a piece of it a few minutes
                        out of the oven. A little steam rises
                        from the slits on top. Sugar and spice -
                        cinnamon - burned into the crust.
                        But she's wearing these dark glasses
                        in the kitchen at ten o'clock
                        in the morning - everything nice -
                        as she watches me break off
                        a piece, bring it to my mouth,
                        and blow on it. My daughter's kitchen,
                        in winter. I fork the pie in
                        and tell myself to stay out of it.
                        She says she loves him. No way
                        could it be worse.

                        Raymond Carver
                        That apple pie sure hits the spot.

                        Comment

                        • johncorrigan
                          Full Member
                          • Nov 2010
                          • 10358

                          Originally posted by Padraig View Post
                          That apple pie sure hits the spot.
                          Hot yet chilling, Padraig.
                          Last edited by johncorrigan; 27-05-16, 22:46.

                          Comment

                          • johncorrigan
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 10358

                            Daljit Nagra is apparently Radio4 and Radio 4 extra's poet in residence. He has a programme on a Sunday afternoon which I've caught for the last two weeks where he introduces programmes from the archives. Today had David Walliams and Andrew Motion discussing Phillip Larkin. Last week was a programme about Paul Celan's 'Mapesbury Road'. Found them very interesting indeed.

                            Comment

                            • vinteuil
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 12815

                              Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                              Daljit Nagra is apparently Radio4 and Radio 4 extra's poet in residence. He has a programme on a Sunday afternoon which I've caught for the last two weeks where he introduces programmes from the archives....
                              ... well, at least they've got some one other than the intolerable I*n M*M****n > >

                              Comment

                              • Daniel
                                Full Member
                                • Jun 2012
                                • 418

                                Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                                Daljit Nagra is apparently Radio4 and Radio 4 extra's poet in residence. He has a programme on a Sunday afternoon which I've caught for the last two weeks where he introduces programmes from the archives. Today had David Walliams and Andrew Motion discussing Phillip Larkin. Last week was a programme about Paul Celan's 'Mapesbury Road'. Found them very interesting indeed.
                                http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b07d3htz
                                Thank you for mentioning these, they both sound very interesting! Larkin certainly came out with some ugly utterances in his life, but I find his poetry uniquely affecting.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X