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Thread: Today's poet

  1. #12921
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
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    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by Alf View Post
    Autumn

    They brought me a quilled, yellow dahlia,
    Opulent, flaunting.
    Round gold
    Flung out of a pale green stalk.
    Round, ripe gold
    Of maturity,
    Meticulously frilled and flaming,
    A fire-ball of proclamation:
    Fecundity decked in staring yellow
    For all the world to see.
    They brought a quilled, yellow dahlia,
    To me who am barren
    Shall I send it to you,
    You who have taken with you
    All I once possessed?

    Amy Lowell
    That's wonderful Alf. At the end of last weekend's run in Mosedale (back o'skiddaw) I sat on the bridge over the beck, messing around with a few soft pastels, trying to capture the marvellous array of stunning, fiery, autumnal colours set agains the grey purples of Carrick Fell. Didn't manage it of course ( ), but it was fun nevertheless, and really breathtaking (but not as much as my slog up Blencathra!).
    Am Yisrael Chai

  2. #12922
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    Re: Today's poet

    To an Athlete Dying Young

    The time you won your town the race
    We chaired you through the market-place;
    Man and boy stood cheering by,
    And home we brought you shoulder-high.

    To-day, the road all runners come,
    Shoulder-high we bring you home,
    And set you at your threshold down,
    Townsman of a stiller town.

    Smart lad, to slip betimes away
    From fields where glory does not stay
    And early though the laurel grows
    It withers quicker than the rose.

    Eyes the shady night has shut
    Cannot see the record cut,
    And silence sounds no worse than cheers
    After earth has stopped the ears:

    Now you will not swell the rout
    Of lads that wore their honours out,
    Runners whom renown outran
    And the name died before the man.

    So set, before its echoes fade,
    The fleet foot on the sill of shade,
    And hold to the low lintel up
    The still-defended challenge-cup.

    And round that early-laurelled head
    Will flock to gaze the strengthless dead,
    And find unwithered on its curls
    The garland briefer than a girl's.

    Alfred Edward Housman

  3. #12923
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    Re: Today's poet

    This one is for injured and recovering runners everywhere.

    The Panther

    His vision, from the constantly passing bars,
    has grown so weary that it cannot hold
    anything else. It seems to him there are
    a thousand bars; and behind the bars, no world.

    As he paces in cramped circles, over and over,
    the movement of his powerful soft strides
    is like a ritual dance around a center
    in which a mighty will stands paralyzed.

    Only at times, the curtain of the pupils
    lifts, quietly--. An image enters in,
    rushes down through the tensed, arrested muscles,
    plunges into the heart and is gone.

    Rainer Maria Rilke

  4. #12924
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    Re: Today's poet

    Fall

    Short days. The leaves are falling
    to the deadline of the ground, gold

    as the pages of myth. I feel the cold earth
    fall away from the sun, the light's heart harden.

    I fall too, as if from the glinting plane overhead,
    backwards, through fierce blue, though I only lie

    in your arms, on our coats, the last hour of autumn,
    grasping a fistful of yellowing grass as you move in me,

    fall and fall and fall towards you, your passionate gravity.

    Carol Ann Duffy
    Am Yisrael Chai

  5. #12925

    Re: Today's poet

    Alf that Housman verse was very very moving, thanks for sharing that.

    Been reflecting on the most glorious times to be on the fells. For me it's the arrival of first light after a night moving through the mountains. Now more than ever, it's important to be deeply conscious of those moments that make life's high points so vivid, including those wonderful moments on the fells that are hard to describe without turning to verse, of sorts...

    Here's my attempt to try and sum up that magic time to be out. I hope it rings a few bells and a few wry smiles


    Arrival

    Appearing from the mists
    As if they, not I, have just arrived there
    The encircling heights of the summits to come
    and the ones that are done

    The new morning light
    A promise the cold night could never break
    All the colours of this Earth emerge from the ebon
    One by glorious one

  6. #12926
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    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by OneOffPoet View Post
    Alf that Housman verse was very very moving, thanks for sharing that.

    Been reflecting on the most glorious times to be on the fells. For me it's the arrival of first light after a night moving through the mountains. Now more than ever, it's important to be deeply conscious of those moments that make life's high points so vivid, including those wonderful moments on the fells that are hard to describe without turning to verse, of sorts...

    Here's my attempt to try and sum up that magic time to be out. I hope it rings a few bells and a few wry smiles


    Arrival

    Appearing from the mists
    As if they, not I, have just arrived there
    The encircling heights of the summits to come
    and the ones that are done

    The new morning light
    A promise the cold night could never break
    All the colours of this Earth emerge from the ebon
    One by glorious one
    I enjoyed that OOP and it does ring a bell.:thumbup:

  7. #12927
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    Re: Today's poet

    A good Autumnal poem that Mossy and one to warm you up a bit as well

    Here's one from the man from Mytholmroyd which is also the home of Calder Valley Fell runners of course

    There came a day

    There came a day that caught the summer
    Wrung its neck
    Plucked it
    And ate it.

    Now what shall I do with the trees?
    The day said, the day said.
    Strip them bare, strip them bare.
    Let’s see what is really there.

    And what shall I do with the sun?
    The day said, the day said.
    Roll him away till he’s cold and small.
    He’ll come back rested if he comes back at all.

    And what shall I do with the birds?
    The day said, the day said.
    The birds I’ve frightened, let them flit,
    I’ll hang out pork for the brave tomtit.

    And what shall I do with the seed?
    The day said, the day said.
    Bury it deep, see what it’s worth.
    See if it can stand the earth.

    What shall I do with the people?
    The day said, the day said.
    Stuff them with apple and blackberry pie –
    They’ll love me then till the day they die.

    There came this day and he was autumn.
    His mouth was wide
    And red as a sunset.
    His tail was an icicle.

    Ted Hughes

  8. #12928
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
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    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by Alf View Post
    A good Autumnal poem that Mossy and one to warm you up a bit as well

    Here's one from the man from Mytholmroyd which is also the home of Calder Valley Fell runners of course

    There came a day

    There came a day that caught the summer
    Wrung its neck
    Plucked it
    And ate it.

    Now what shall I do with the trees?
    The day said, the day said.
    Strip them bare, strip them bare.
    Let’s see what is really there.

    And what shall I do with the sun?
    The day said, the day said.
    Roll him away till he’s cold and small.
    He’ll come back rested if he comes back at all.

    And what shall I do with the birds?
    The day said, the day said.
    The birds I’ve frightened, let them flit,
    I’ll hang out pork for the brave tomtit.

    And what shall I do with the seed?
    The day said, the day said.
    Bury it deep, see what it’s worth.
    See if it can stand the earth.

    What shall I do with the people?
    The day said, the day said.
    Stuff them with apple and blackberry pie –
    They’ll love me then till the day they die.

    There came this day and he was autumn.
    His mouth was wide
    And red as a sunset.
    His tail was an icicle.

    Ted Hughes
    Blimey! That's a Ted Hughes I've not read before. Cheers Alf - really liked it.

    Hey OneOffPoet, that's very resonant of the breaking dawn, although for me it's watching the event while half-waking on a tussocky hill side, tucked up in a bivvy bag. I'm ashamed to say I've not managed to run through the night yet as I'm too much of a lazy hound!
    Am Yisrael Chai

  9. #12929
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    Re: Today's poet

    Coney Island

    Coming down from downpatrick
    Stopping off at st. johns point
    Out all day birdwatching
    And the craic was good
    Stopped off at strangford lough
    Early in the morning
    Drove through shrigley taking pictures
    And on to killyleagh
    Stopped off for sunday papers at the
    Lecale district, just before coney island

    On and on, over the hill to ardglass
    In the jamjar, autumn sunshine, magnificent
    And all shining through

    Stop off at ardglass for a couple of jars of
    Mussels and some potted herrings in case
    We get famished before dinner

    On and on, over the hill and the craic is good
    Heading towards coney island

    I look at the side of your face as the sunlight comes
    Streaming through the window in the autumn sunshine
    And all the time going to coney island Im thinking,
    Wouldn't it be great if it was like this all the time.

    Van Morrison

  10. #12930
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
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    Re: Today's poet

    Doubt shall not make an end of you

    Doubt shall not make an end of you
    nor closing eyes lose your shape
    when the retina's light fades;
    what dawns inside me will light you.
    In our public lives we may confine ourselves to darkness,
    our nowhere mouths explain away our dreams,
    but alone we are incorruptible creatures,
    our light sunk too deep to be of any social use
    we wander free and perfect without moving
    or love on hard carpets
    where couples revolving round the room
    end found at its centre.
    Our love like a whale from its deepest ocean rises -
    I offer this and a multitude of images
    from party rooms to oceans,
    the single star and all its reflections;
    being completed we include all
    and nothing wishes to escape us.
    Beneath my hand your hardening breast agrees
    to sing of its own nature,
    then from a place without names our origin comes shivering.
    Feel nothing separate then,
    we have translated each other into light
    and into love go streaming.

    Brian Patten
    Am Yisrael Chai

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