Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

Saturday, April 12, 2025

OF CHERRY BLOSSOMS AND POETRY



 

A few days ago, while gazing with pleasure at our weeping cherry tree, I found myself quietly reciting this poem by A.E. Housman:

 

Loveliest of trees, the cherry now

Is hung with bloom along the bough,

And stands about the woodland ride

Wearing white for Eastertide.

 

Now, of my threescore years and ten,

Twenty will not come again,

And take from seventy springs a score,

It only leaves me fifty more.

 

And since to look at things in bloom

Fifty springs are little room,

About the woodlands I will go

To see the cherry hung with snow.

 

I must have been around twenty myself when I first encountered these lines, an age at which 50 years seemed an eternity, and I could no more imagine myself at 70 than I could imagine myself flying to the moon. Yet now, I find, to my astonishment, that I have not only reached 70, but have, in fact, outlived my threescore years and ten. 

 

And how is it that I remember Housman’s poem all these years later?  Well, in my youth, I would read favorites over and over again. I wasn’t trying to memorize them, but my brain was young and impressionable, and much of the poetry that I read decades ago remains fresh in my mind, even as I struggle to remember the plot of a book that I read last month. 

 

Today, as I sit pondering Housman’s poem and the years that have passed since I accidently learned it off by heart, I am happy to report that I am still enjoying things in bloom. And although I now spend hours, rather than whole days at a time, tending to my garden, we are old friends, this patch of ground and I, and it reliably delights me with daffodils, forget-me-nots, rhodies, lilacs, irises, roses, and much more each year. 

 

And so, with gratitude for whatever years I am given, I shall, with Housman, take the time to enjoy those blossoms that present themselves for my enchantment for as long as I am able.  

 

May we all do the same, whatever our age. 

 



 

 

 

Monday, January 15, 2024

WORDS, WORDS, WORDS


 

 

I came across a new-to-me word while doing a puzzle the other day.  The word was “heteronym.”  Here is the most straightforward definition I could find:

 

“[O]ne of two or more homographs (such as a bass voice and bass, a fish) that differ in pronunciation and meaning.”   - Merriam-Webster.

 

I tell you this, not to present you with a word that might also be new to you, but to share my geek-ish excitement over the discovery. 

 

I experienced a similar delight this morning, when, once again, working on a puzzle, I learned that temperament has an “a” in it.  I hadn’t known this. I did know that temperature had an “a” in it, but English spelling is a tricky business, and it had not occurred to include an “a” in temperament.

 

As you may by now have surmised, I love words.  

 

I have loved words ever since I can remember -- ever since I sat in an overstuffed chair in my childhood living room, sounding out “See Dick run.  See Jane run.” ** This is one of those vivid memories, complete with physical details -- I can see and feel the nubby, brownish material of the chair -- that stick in the mind.  Who knows why?  I call them snapshot memories – nothing to surround them – they just loom out of a black hole. 

   

Here is a snapshot memory of me that a friend shared recently:  

 

It is maybe 40 years ago.  We are walking across Tenth Avenue in downtown Portland, when I ask her what she thinks about while walking around.  She, a yoga teacher, tells me she is always looking at people and thinking about whether their bodies are in alignment.  When she asks me the same question, I tell her I am usually thinking about words.  

 

I don’t remember this exchange, but it absolutely rings true. It is of a piece with my own word-related memories.  Here is one:

 

I am in my early twenties and am at the home of a much-older couple with whom I am friends.  I am telling the man, whom I much admire, about a dream or series of dreams, and I say, “They were just short vignettes, really.“   

 

Here’s the thing.  I pronounce “vignette” as “vidge-net.”  

 

Decades later, I can still remember the look that flickered across his face.  Was it surprise?  Suppressed laughter?  The man in question, being older and wiser and quite kind, refrained from saying anything. Bless him.

 

It was probably several years before I learned the word’s proper pronunciation.  Sadly, the passage of time had not erased the memory of my friend’s look.  I was retrospectively embarrassed.  

 

What can I say?  I had never studied French, but was an avid reader, scooping up words as I read.  I had a vast reading vocabulary.  That is, I had learned a great many words that I had never heard spoken.  With the passage of time, this memory no longer brings embarrassment, only compassion for a young woman who loved words, whether or not she could pronounce them.

 

One more memory.  I am in elementary school.  I am nine or ten.  For homework, we are to make a list of homonyms (not to be confused with the aforementioned heteronyms). This is right up my alley. But, do I stop at making the list?  Oh, no.  I am so pleased with my list that I staple it to piece of colored construction paper and staple another piece of construction paper on top as a cover, upon which I write these words:  

 

“Even though I am a busy teenager, I always have time for homonyms.”  I can still see the stick figure of a teenager that I drew alongside these words.  In memory, her skirt is a triangle, and she is carrying a purse.  I can still see myself proudly handing this creation to my teacher.  What was I thinking?  What did I imagine being a teenager would be like? Words and a purse, apparently.

 

As a matter of fact, I remained a word geek throughout my teenage years and beyond.  I memorized miles of poetry during high school and college – not by trying, but by osmosis, by reading the ones I loved, over and over again.  (To this day, I can recite many of these poems, but don’t ask me what I read last week . . .)

 

My love of words has not changed in the decades since I memorized all that poetry.  I am most happy when I am reading, writing, or thinking about words. Looking back, I see them as a major throughline of my life. 

 

And you?

 

What is it that has followed you throughout your life?  Where is it that you feel most aligned with yourself? 

 

                                                Photo by Glen Carrie on Unsplash

 

** Books for early readers have greatly improved since the 1950s.  If you are too young to remember Dick and Jane books, be grateful.  

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, May 2, 2020

THE SOLACE OF POETRY


Each morning, after waking and taking care of my ablutions, I do these things:  I return to bed and do some lying-down stretches. Next, I get out of bed and do some standing-up stretches.  

Then comes the good part.

I sit on the edge of my bed and pull out one of the books of poetry that lives on the shelf in my bedside table.  With pleasant anticipation, I open the book at random and read a poem.  Sometimes two or three, if I am not feeling too eager to get to my first cup of tea.

After this, I spend a few minutes meditating and/or praying (after a fashion).  

Each part of this routine is important to me, but today I want to focus on the reading-a-poem part.

A poem is, for me, the perfect reading material for early morning.  It is such a compact pleasure.  So much wisdom or beauty or humor or pick-an-emotion packed into a few lines or pages. Truly a poem goes straight to the heart of the matter, whatever the matter may be. 

And there’s this:  First thing in the morning, my brain is not yet fully online. And, where poetry is concerned, that is just fine.  Although my brain is engaged when I read a poem, it is not taking the lead. I more inhabit a poem than think about it.  In fact, too much thinking can sometimes ruin the experience.  Often the only approach is to let the poem wash over the heart and soul and see what is left behind.  What could be more suitable for the half-awake spirit?

I guess it isn’t surprising that I choose to start each day this way, for I can’t remember a time when I didn’t love poetry.  As a child, I poured over a collection for young people – Its title is lost to me, but I can clearly see its blue cover and black spine. I thrilled to "The Highwayman” (Alfred Noyes), mesmerized by the bravery of Bess, the landlord’s black-eyed daughter, who gave her life to warn her true love of his impending arrest, and “Sea Fever” (John Masefield), which gave voice to my love of the ocean.

In high school, I discovered Robert Frost (“Some say the world will end in fire/Some say in ice.”) and Emily Dickinson (“I’m nobody! Who are you?/Are you – Nobody – too?”)  And then in college I discovered the English Romantics. The words of these men, almost all of whom died young, suited my sense of the dramatic.  I remember a day when I wandered the campus, desperate to find someone who might appreciate these lines from Shelley’s “Ode to the West Wind”: 

As thus with thee in prayer in my sore need. 
Oh, lift me as a wave, a leaf, a cloud! 
I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed! 

As I said, these were my dramatic years . . .

As I awoke to feminism’s second wave, I turned from the drama of the English Romantics to that of Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton.  (OK, so I was smitten with depressives.)  And I returned to Emily Dickinson as salve for a broken heart:  “After great pain a formal feeling comes --”

I also fell for e .e. cummings and Lawrence Ferlinghetti, John Donne and Theodore Roethke.  During these years, I memorized yards of poetry – not on purpose, but as a side-effect of returning to favorites again and again.   Here are a few lines from Roethke’s The Waking,” a poem etched on my heart to this day:

             I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.   
I feel my fate in what I cannot fear.   
I learn by going where I have to go.

We think by feeling. What is there to know?   
I hear my being dance from ear to ear.   
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.

As the years went by, I discovered Adrienne Rich and and William Stafford, Denise Levertov and  W. S. Merwin, Donald Hall and Jane Kenyon, Maya Angelou and Rita Dove --  and so many more.

Now, in addition to whatever I open to in the morning, my taste runs to Rumi and Mary Oliver.  I repeatedly return to John O’Donohue’s To Bless the Space Between Us and Stephen Mitchell’s translation of The Tao te Ching.  

The poets have changed over the years, but the pleasure remains the same. 

A twin to the pleasure of reading poetry is that of writing it. In high school, I wrote a few tentative poems.  Then, in college, the dam burst.  I wrote things like this (note, if you will, the cummings-influenced disdain for upper case):

eyes
are the dwelling place
of truth (all
other sites –
after careful consideration –
having been dismissed 
as unrealistic).
for
smiles are only
paste-on things
to be purchased 
by politicians
ad men and the like
for the deliberate
pursuit of deception,
and 
words are oftentimes
subverted
by acts of awful treachery
while masquerading as
harbingers of love.

let others gather smiles and words
in bouquets of self-deception
i shall always listen for the truth in eyes.

And that should hold us on the subject of my youthful poetry.  I gave up the practice for a good long while, and then took it up again in late middle age.  Now I write things like this:
         
               GRATITUDE

This morning on my walk
I thanked each tree
for holding up the sky.

I thanked each bird
for splitting infinity
as it larked across my view.

I thanked January daffodils
for the startling audacity
of their faces against the fog.

And I thanked creation
for eyes and ears and tongue
with which to praise.

There is solace for me in writing such lines, in gathering my feelings into words.  Reading and writing poetry, I feel I am swimming against the current of endless noise and distraction that drowns out the soul’s voice, and finding my way to a quiet spot, where I may spend some time exploring the mystery at the core of our lives.  

Having, I think, taken enough of your time, I will leave you with these lines from Mary Oliver’s “Dogfish”: 

You don’t want to hear the story
of my life, and anyway
I don’t want to tell it, I want to listen
to the enormous waterfalls of the sun.
And anyway it’s the same old story – – –
a few people just trying,
one way or another,
to survive.
Mostly, I want to be kind.
And nobody, of course, is kind,
or mean,
for a simple reason.
And nobody gets out of it, having to
swim through the fires to stay in
this world.
May the fires of which she speaks burn away all that interferes with our true paths through this world.  And may you, too, find solace in poetry as you make your way along your path.