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Thread: Today's poet

  1. #13511
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
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    Mercies

    She might have had months left of her dog-years,
    but to be who? She’d grown light as a nest
    and spent the whole day under her long ears
    listening to the bad radio in her breast.
    On the steel bench, knowing what was taking shape
    she tried and tried to stand, as if to sign
    that she was still of use, and should escape
    our selection. So I turned her face to mine,
    and seeing only love there – which, for all
    the wolf in her, she knew as well as we did –
    she lay back down and let the needle enter.
    And love was surely what her eyes conceded
    as her stare grew hard, and one bright aerial
    quit making its report back to the centre.

    Don Paterson
    Am Yisrael Chai

  2. #13512
    Master PeteS's Avatar
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    Beautifully put if incredibly sad. A day I dread I may have to face.

  3. #13513
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
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    "Two Pewits"


    Under the after-sunset sky
    Two pewits sport and cry,
    More white than is the moon on high
    Riding the dark surge silently;
    More black than earth. Their cry
    Is the one sound under the sky.
    They alone move, now low, now high,
    And merrily they cry
    To the mischievous Spring sky,
    Plunging earthward, tossing high,
    Over the ghost who wonders why
    So merrily they cry and fly,
    Nor choose 'twixt earth and sky,
    While the moon's quarter silently
    Rides, and earth rests as silently.


    Edward Thomas
    Am Yisrael Chai

  4. #13514
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
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    For all head-torchers whose batteries start to go on the blink somewhere on t'fells!

    Out in the Dark

    by Edward Thomas


    Out in the dark over the snow
    The fallow fawns invisible go
    With the fallow doe ;
    And the winds blow
    Fast as the stars are slow.

    Stealthily the dark haunts round
    And, when the lamp goes, without sound
    At a swifter bound
    Than the swiftest hound,
    Arrives, and all else is drowned ;

    And star and I and wind and deer,
    Are in the dark together, - near,
    Yet far, - and fear
    Drums on my ear
    In that sage company drear.

    How weak and little is the light,
    All the universe of sight,
    Love and delight,
    Before the might,
    If you love it not, of night.
    Am Yisrael Chai

  5. #13515
    Senior Member William Clough's Avatar
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    I awoke today and found the frost perched on the town
    It hovered in a frozen sky, then it gobbled summer down
    When the sun turns traitor cold
    And all trees are shivering in a naked row
    I get the urge for going but I never seem to go
    I get the urge for going
    When the meadow grass is turning brown
    Summertime is falling down and winter is closing in
    I had me a man in summertime
    He had summer-colored skin
    And not another girl in town
    My darling's heart could win
    But when the leaves fell on the ground
    And bully winds came around pushed them face down in the snow
    He got the urge for going and I had to let him go
    He got the urge for going
    When the meadow grass was turning brown
    And summertime was falling down and winter was closing in
    Now the warriors of winter they gave a cold triumphant shout
    And all that stays is dying and all that lives is getting out
    See the geese in chevron flight flapping and racing on before the snow
    They've got the urge for going and they've got the wings so they can go
    They get the urge for going
    When the meadow grass is turning brown
    Summertime is falling down and winter is closing in
    I'll ply the fire with kindling and pull the blankets to my chin
    I'll lock the vagrant winter out and I'll bolt my wandering in
    I'd like to call back summertime and have her stay for just another month or so
    But she's got the urge for going so I guess she'll have to go
    She get the urge for going when the meadow grass is turning brown
    And all her empires are falling down
    And winter's closing in
    And I get the urge for going when the meadow grass is turning brown
    And summertime is falling down

    Not a poem but the lyrics of Urge For Going by Joni Mitchell.

  6. #13516
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    Dib Dib Dib Dob Dob Dob

    Baden-Powell falls to the mob.

    LB 2020
    Visibility good except in Hill Fog

  7. #13517
    Master Daletownrunner's Avatar
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    Sea to the West

    When the sea’s to the west
    The evenings are one dazzle –
    You can find no sign of water.
    Sun upflows the horizon;
    Waves of shine
    Heave, crest, fracture,
    Explode on the shore;
    The wide day burns.
    In the incandescent mantle of the air.

    Once, fifteen,
    I would lean on handlebars,
    Staring into the flare,
    Blinded by looking,
    Letting the gutterings and sykes of light
    Flood into my skull.

    Then, on the stroke of bedtime,
    I’d turn to the town,
    Cycle past purpling dykes
    To a brown drizzle
    Where black-scum shadows
    Stagnated between backyard walls.
    I pulled the warm dark over my head
    Like an eiderdown.

    Yet in that final stare when I
    (Five times, perhaps, fifteen)
    Creak protesting away –
    The sea to the west,
    The land darkening –
    Let my eyes at the last be blinded
    Not by the dark
    But by the dazzle.

    Norman Nicholson

  8. #13518
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Daletownrunner View Post
    Sea to the West

    When the sea’s to the west
    The evenings are one dazzle –
    You can find no sign of water.
    Sun upflows the horizon;
    Waves of shine
    Heave, crest, fracture,
    Explode on the shore;
    The wide day burns.
    In the incandescent mantle of the air.

    Once, fifteen,
    I would lean on handlebars,
    Staring into the flare,
    Blinded by looking,
    Letting the gutterings and sykes of light
    Flood into my skull.

    Then, on the stroke of bedtime,
    I’d turn to the town,
    Cycle past purpling dykes
    To a brown drizzle
    Where black-scum shadows
    Stagnated between backyard walls.
    I pulled the warm dark over my head
    Like an eiderdown.

    Yet in that final stare when I
    (Five times, perhaps, fifteen)
    Creak protesting away –
    The sea to the west,
    The land darkening –
    Let my eyes at the last be blinded
    Not by the dark
    But by the dazzle.

    Norman Nicholson
    Great choice Daletownrunner. Norman Nicholson ... a Millom lad, most of his life, but plagued by TB, and often bed ridden. Hence, The Pot Geranium.

    THE POT GERANIUM
    By Norman Nicholson

    Green slated gables clasp the stem of the hill
    In the lemony autumn sun; an acid wind
    Dissolves the leaf stalks of back garden trees,
    And chimneys with their fires unlit
    Seem yet to puff a yellow smoke of poplars.
    Freestone is brown as bark, and the model bakery
    That once was a Primitive Methodist Chapel
    Lifts its cornice against the sky.
    And now, like a flight of racing pigeons
    Slipped from their basket in the station yard,
    A box kite rides the air, a square of calico,
    Crimson as the cornets of the Royal Temperance Band
    When they brass up the wind in marching. The kite
    Strains and struggles on its leash, and unseen boys,
    In chicken run or allotment or by the side
    Of the old quarry full to the gullet with water,
    Pay out on their string a rag of dream,
    High as the Jubilee flagpole.

    I turn from the window
    (Letting the bobbins of autumn wind up the swallows)
    And lie on my bed. The ceiling
    Slopes over like a tent, and white walls
    Wrap themselves round me, leaving only
    A flap for the light to blow through. Thighs and spine
    Are clamped to the mattress and looping springs
    Twine round my chest and hold me. I feel the air
    Move on my face like spiders, see the light
    Slide across the plaster; but wind and sun
    Are mine no longer, nor have I kite to claim them,
    Or string to fish the clouds. But there on a shelf
    In the warm corner of my dormer window
    A pot geranium flies its bright balloon,
    Nor can the festering hot-house of the tropics
    Breed a tenser crimson; for this crock of soil,
    Six inch deep by four across,
    Contains the pattern, the prod and pulse of life,
    Complete as the Nile or the Niger.

    And what need therefore
    To stretch for the straining kite? – for kite and flower
    Bloom in my room for ever; the light that lifts them
    Shines in my own eyes, and my body’s warmth
    Hatches their red in my veins. It is the Gulf Stream
    That rains down the chimney, making the soot spit; it is the Trade Wind
    That blows in the draught under the bedroom door.
    My ways are circumscribed, confined as a limpet
    To one small radius of rock; yet
    I eat the equator, breathe the sky, and carry
    The great white sun in the dirt of my finger nails.


    More about him here https://www.normannicholson.org/
    Am Yisrael Chai

  9. #13519
    Master Daletownrunner's Avatar
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    Sep 2012
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mossdog View Post
    Great choice Daletownrunner. Norman Nicholson ... a Millom lad, most of his life, but plagued by TB, and often bed ridden. Hence, The Pot Geranium.

    THE POT GERANIUM
    By Norman Nicholson

    Green slated gables clasp the stem of the hill
    In the lemony autumn sun; an acid wind
    Dissolves the leaf stalks of back garden trees,
    And chimneys with their fires unlit
    Seem yet to puff a yellow smoke of poplars.
    Freestone is brown as bark, and the model bakery
    That once was a Primitive Methodist Chapel
    Lifts its cornice against the sky.
    And now, like a flight of racing pigeons
    Slipped from their basket in the station yard,
    A box kite rides the air, a square of calico,
    Crimson as the cornets of the Royal Temperance Band
    When they brass up the wind in marching. The kite
    Strains and struggles on its leash, and unseen boys,
    In chicken run or allotment or by the side
    Of the old quarry full to the gullet with water,
    Pay out on their string a rag of dream,
    High as the Jubilee flagpole.

    I turn from the window
    (Letting the bobbins of autumn wind up the swallows)
    And lie on my bed. The ceiling
    Slopes over like a tent, and white walls
    Wrap themselves round me, leaving only
    A flap for the light to blow through. Thighs and spine
    Are clamped to the mattress and looping springs
    Twine round my chest and hold me. I feel the air
    Move on my face like spiders, see the light
    Slide across the plaster; but wind and sun
    Are mine no longer, nor have I kite to claim them,
    Or string to fish the clouds. But there on a shelf
    In the warm corner of my dormer window
    A pot geranium flies its bright balloon,
    Nor can the festering hot-house of the tropics
    Breed a tenser crimson; for this crock of soil,
    Six inch deep by four across,
    Contains the pattern, the prod and pulse of life,
    Complete as the Nile or the Niger.

    And what need therefore
    To stretch for the straining kite? – for kite and flower
    Bloom in my room for ever; the light that lifts them
    Shines in my own eyes, and my body’s warmth
    Hatches their red in my veins. It is the Gulf Stream
    That rains down the chimney, making the soot spit; it is the Trade Wind
    That blows in the draught under the bedroom door.
    My ways are circumscribed, confined as a limpet
    To one small radius of rock; yet
    I eat the equator, breathe the sky, and carry
    The great white sun in the dirt of my finger nails.


    More about him here https://www.normannicholson.org/
    His stuff is amazing Mossdog, I’m just reading The Whispering Poet, it’s an interesting read

  10. #13520
    Master Daletownrunner's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Location
    Out Running
    Posts
    1,160

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