Poetry

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  • Globaltruth
    Host
    • Nov 2010
    • 4289

    My favourite experience of the year so far was a few days in the wilderness of the Yorkshire Dales - miles from anywhere, walking an old Roman track, with more skylarks per cloud than I have ever seen or heard before.
    Then, synchronistically, Words & Music did a 'skylark special'.
    The obvious suspects were all there.
    Including this one...Percy Bysshe Shelley

    HAIL to thee, blithe spirit!
    Bird thou never wert—
    That from heaven or near it
    Pourest thy full heart
    In profuse strains of unpremeditated art.

    Higher still and higher
    From the earth thou springest,
    Like a cloud of fire;
    The blue deep thou wingest,
    And singing still dost soar, and soaring ever singest.

    In the golden light'ning
    Of the sunken sun,
    O'er which clouds are bright'ning,
    Thou dost float and run,
    Like an unbodied joy whose race is just begun.

    The pale purple even
    Melts around thy flight;
    Like a star of heaven,
    In the broad daylight
    Thou art unseen, but yet I hear thy shrill delight—

    Keen as are the arrows
    Of that silver sphere
    Whose intense lamp narrows
    In the white dawn clear,
    Until we hardly see, we feel that it is there.

    All the earth and air
    With thy voice is loud,
    As when night is bare,
    From one lonely cloud
    The moon rains out her beams, and heaven is overflow'd.

    What thou art we know not;
    What is most like thee?
    From rainbow clouds there flow not
    Drops so bright to see,
    As from thy presence showers a rain of melody:—

    Like a poet hidden
    In the light of thought,
    Singing hymns unbidden,
    Till the world is wrought
    To sympathy with hopes and fears it heeded not:

    Like a high-born maiden
    In a palace tower,
    Soothing her love-laden
    Soul in secret hour
    With music sweet as love, which overflows her bower:

    Like a glow-worm golden
    In a dell of dew,
    Scattering unbeholden
    Its aërial hue
    Among the flowers and grass which screen it from the view:

    Like a rose embower'd
    In its own green leaves,
    By warm winds deflower'd,
    Till the scent it gives
    Makes faint with too much sweet those heavy-wingèd thieves.

    Sound of vernal showers
    On the twinkling grass,
    Rain-awaken'd flowers—
    All that ever was
    Joyous and clear and fresh—thy music doth surpass.

    Teach us, sprite or bird,
    What sweet thoughts are thine:
    I have never heard
    Praise of love or wine
    That panted forth a flood of rapture so divine.

    Chorus hymeneal,
    Or triumphal chant,
    Match'd with thine would be all
    But an empty vaunt—
    A thin wherein we feel there is some hidden want.

    What objects are the fountains
    Of thy happy strain?
    What fields, or waves, or mountains?
    What shapes of sky or plain?
    What love of thine own kind? what ignorance of pain?

    With thy clear keen joyance
    Languor cannot be:
    Shadow of annoyance
    Never came near thee:
    Thou lovest, but ne'er knew love's sad satiety.

    Waking or asleep,
    Thou of death must deem
    Things more true and deep
    Than we mortals dream,
    Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream?

    We look before and after,
    And pine for what is not:
    Our sincerest laughter
    With some pain is fraught;
    Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought.

    Yet, if we could scorn
    Hate and pride and fear,
    If we were things born
    Not to shed a tear,
    I know not how thy joy we ever should come near.

    Better than all measures
    Of delightful sound,
    Better than all treasures
    That in books are found,
    Thy skill to poet were, thou scorner of the ground!

    Teach me half the gladness
    That thy brain must know;
    Such harmonious madness
    From my lips would flow,
    The world should listen then, as I am listening now.

    Comment

    • vinteuil
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 12815

      In Piam Memoriam


      1

      Created purely from glass the saint stands,
      Exposing his gifted quite empty hands
      Like a conjurer about to begin,
      A righteous man begging of righteous men.


      2

      In the sun lily-and-gold-coloured,
      Filtering the cruder light, he has endured,
      A feature for our regard; and will keep;
      Of worldly purity the stained archetype.


      3

      The scummed pond twitches. The great holly-tree,
      Emptied and shut, blows clear of wasting snow,
      The common, puddled substance: beneath,
      Like a revealed mineral, a new earth.



      Geoffrey Hill [18 June 1932 - 30 June 2016]

      Comment

      • ferneyhoughgeliebte
        Gone fishin'
        • Sep 2011
        • 30163

        Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
        Geoffrey Hill [18 June 1932 - 30 June 2016]
        Oh, good grief - I'd missed this news. A great, great poet and writer on poetry - I treasure the memories of his Shakespeare lectures, given at the University of Leeds in my second year there, just before he moved to Cambridge. A terrible loss to the cultural life of the world.
        [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

        Comment

        • Stanfordian
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 9310

          Originally posted by Globaltruth View Post
          My favourite experience of the year so far was a few days in the wilderness of the Yorkshire Dales - miles from anywhere, walking an old Roman track, with more skylarks per cloud than I have ever seen or heard before.
          Then, synchronistically, Words & Music did a 'skylark special'.
          The obvious suspects were all there.
          Including this one...Percy Bysshe Shelley
          Hiya Globaltruth,

          I'd love to know where in the Dales you were?

          Comment

          • Daniel
            Full Member
            • Jun 2012
            • 418

            Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
            ... Joni Mitchell turned this one into her song from 'Night Ride Home' called 'Slouching towards Bethlehem'. Actually I prefer the orchestrated version on 'Travelogue' but can't find it, so here's her original version.
            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cg0xMry2m9s
            Thanks, John, it's a poem that seems to turn up all over the place. Though Joni Mitchell is hardly short of her own poetic inspiration, so many of her lines remain forever burned into this withered brain.

            Comment

            • Padraig
              Full Member
              • Feb 2013
              • 4236

              Apologies for not typing it myself.

              Waiting for the Barbarians

              Constantine P. Cavafy 1863 - 1933

              Comment

              • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                Gone fishin'
                • Sep 2011
                • 30163

                100 years ago, the Mametz Wood engagement in which poet and artist David Jones was injured had just finished. As the recent BBC4 documentary made clear, this battle was the climactic point of Jones' astonishing work, In Parenthesis, written twelve years after the event.

                In 2005, the writer and presenter of that documentary, Owen Sheers, wrote his own commemoration of and tribute to the event:


                Mametz Wood

                For years afterwards the farmers found them –
                the wasted young, turning up under their plough blades
                as they tended the land back into itself.

                A chit of bone, the china plate of a shoulder blade,
                the relic of a finger, the blown
                and broken bird’s egg of a skull,

                all mimicked now in flint, breaking blue in white
                across this field where they were told to walk, not run,
                towards the wood and its nesting machine guns.

                And even now the earth stands sentinel,
                reaching back into itself for reminders of what happened
                like a wound working a foreign body to the surface of the skin.

                This morning, twenty men buried in one long grave,
                a broken mosaic of bone linked arm in arm,
                their skeletons paused mid dance-macabre

                in boots that outlasted them,
                their socketed heads tilted back at an angle
                and their jaws, those that have them, dropped open.

                As if the notes they had sung
                have only now, with this unearthing,
                slipped from their absent tongues.


                Owen SHEERS (b 1974)
                Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 21-07-16, 12:26.
                [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                Comment

                • johncorrigan
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 10358

                  Home alone this morning. Ploughed through the paperwork no problem with music playing through the house and then came across this in my Carver book.

                  Gift

                  A day so happy.
                  Fog lifted early, I worked in the garden.
                  Hummingbirds were stopping over honeysuckle flowers.
                  There was no thing on earth I wanted to possess.
                  I knew no one worth my envying him.
                  Whatever evil I had suffered, I forgot.
                  To think that once I was the same man did not embarrass me.
                  In my body I felt no pain.
                  When straightening up, I saw the blue sea and sails.
                  .

                  Czesław Miłosz

                  Comment

                  • Tevot
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 1011

                    Hello there,

                    It's been quite a while since I posted something here but I came across this today having seen a facebook posting of a former student of mine. In a photo in Wellington she is by the seafront and behind her is some verse on a mural cum sculpture which I was immediately struck by. After a little research may I present the following to you in full ? :-

                    "Blue Rain" by Alistair Te Ariki Campbell (1925-2009)

                    Blue rain from a clear sky.
                    Our world a cube of sunlight –
                    but to the south
                    the violet admonition
                    of thunder.

                    Innocent as flowers,
                    your eyes with their thick lashes
                    open in green surprise.

                    What have we to fear?
                    Frost and a sharp wind
                    reproach us,
                    and a tall sky pelts the roof
                    with blue flowers.

                    You and I in bed, my love,
                    heads leaning together,
                    merry as thieves
                    eating stolen honey –
                    what have we to fear
                    but a borrowed world
                    collapsing all about us
                    in blue ruins?

                    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                    O'Sullivan, V. (Ed.). (1979). An anthology of twentieth century New Zealand poetry. Wellington: Oxford University Press.

                    Best Wishes,

                    Tevot

                    Comment

                    • Globaltruth
                      Host
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 4289

                      Originally posted by Stanfordian View Post
                      Hiya Globaltruth,

                      I'd love to know where in the Dales you were?
                      Only just spotted this.
                      Draw a line from Settle to Kirby Malham
                      Neatly bisect the line
                      There

                      Comment

                      • Padraig
                        Full Member
                        • Feb 2013
                        • 4236

                        And yesterday was Poetry Day.

                        From the Collected Poems of Michael Longley

                        Ceasefire

                        The Ghost Orchid 1995

                        Comment

                        • Lat-Literal
                          Guest
                          • Aug 2015
                          • 6983

                          Originally posted by Padraig View Post
                          And yesterday was Poetry Day.

                          From the Collected Poems of Michael Longley

                          Ceasefire

                          The Ghost Orchid 1995

                          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qyXSLGADB0
                          Yes indeed, Padraig, and it was marked by R3 Breakfast and Newsnight among others.

                          Thank you very much for your poem.

                          Comment

                          • johncorrigan
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 10358

                            It's been a long, long time since I was a smoker but images of it are still occasionally attractive, usually centre around the rolling ritual. This depiction by William Letford caught my attention in the Grauny's Saturday Poem this weekend.

                            Moments of the mind

                            Three men sit at the kitchen table. My grandfather
                            smokes Golden Virginia. Making a roll-up
                            has become his ritual. His fingers help him think.
                            So that’s what he does. He teases tobacco from his tin.
                            My father smokes Silk Cut and has a certain way
                            of holding a cigarette. Trapping it at the base
                            of his first two fingers and lifting it to his mouth
                            so his hand covers the lower half of the face. I don’t smoke
                            but there is a bowl of soup in front of me. Both men
                            like to see me eat. The room has been stained
                            by two lifetimes of tobacco, and doesn’t
                            physically exist. But it’s where I come for advice. In fact
                            both men no longer exist, but their voices are as familiar
                            as my own failings. I slam my spoon on to the table.
                            Well if that’s the way it is then that’s the way it is.
                            “That’s the way it is,” says my grandfather.
                            My father nods his head. He says, “That’s the way it is.”

                            by William Letford

                            Comment

                            • agingjb
                              Full Member
                              • Apr 2007
                              • 156

                              David Jones

                              One part of the (appalling) repetitive trail for fragments from the Third Program has someone reading from In Parenthesis. It took me a lot of searching to locate the quote, "I was the spear in Balin's hands", mainly because I thought it was from The Anathemata.

                              But my question is: who was reading? David Jones, or someone else?

                              Comment

                              • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                                Gone fishin'
                                • Sep 2011
                                • 30163

                                Originally posted by agingjb View Post
                                One part of the (appalling) repetitive trail for fragments from the Third Program has someone reading from In Parenthesis. It took me a lot of searching to locate the quote, "I was the spear in Balin's hands", mainly because I thought it was from The Anathemata.

                                But my question is: who was reading? David Jones, or someone else?
                                I've blocked out the R3 Trailers, so can't comment - but this is what Jones himself sounds like:

                                From Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_Parenthesis) In Parenthesis is an epic poem of World War I (or First World War) by David Jones first published in England in 1937. Although Jones had
                                [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

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