Author Topic: Poetry Page  (Read 755653 times)

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1800 on: August 21, 2010, 08:28:42 PM »
Celebrate Summer With Us!
The Poetry Page.
Our haven for words that open our hearts.



In The Summer
by Nizar Qabbani

In the summer
I stretch out on the shore
And think of you
Had I told the sea
What I felt for you,
It would have left its shores,
Its shells,
Its fish,
And followed me.



Discussion Leaders: BarbStAubrey & Fairanna
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

mrssherlock

  • Posts: 2007
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1801 on: August 21, 2010, 10:00:44 PM »
Barb:  Sounds like my dream house, the one I dream of at night as I fall asleep in my little apartment with the four-yr-old's running footsteps upstairs shaking the foundation. ;)
Jackie
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. Edmund Burke

Gumtree

  • Posts: 2741
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1802 on: August 22, 2010, 04:15:41 AM »
Barbara - thanks for the Front Porch poem - love it. The concept transfers easily to old time rural verandahs in Australia and some of it to my own childhood suburban verandah - though in that case it was the 'back' verandah. The 'front' was kept immaculately - but the 'back' was where we lived.
Reading is an art and the reader an artist. Holbrook Jackson

Babi

  • Posts: 6732
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1803 on: August 22, 2010, 11:00:10 AM »
 ANNA, you will be comforted to hear that the Muslim God doesn't really promise men 18
vigins in heaven.  And the Middle Eastern treatment of women is more cultural than anything
else. In other areas of the world Muslim women are not treated like that.
  I have always been distressed to hear a preacher teaching misleading things about other
religions. I don't hear hateful things spoken as much now, thank goodness and the anti-hate
laws.
 Ah, there's your poem, ANNA.  Count on BARB to find just what you need.  Here's another,  perhaps a bit sadder than Barb's.

            Homesick.
I'm homesick to-night, just homesick,
    O! how I long once more
Just to sit as of old in the twilight
    On the step of the old kitchen door
And watch the meek cows in the farmyard,
    And the colts in their frolicksome play
Or standing contentedly nibbling
    At the stacks of the sweet clover hay.
 
I'm homesick to-night, oh so homesick,
    Just to be there once more,
And stand where the golden sunshine
    Falleth across the floor;
Or to sit by the open window
    Where the breeze blows happy and free__
There isn't one spot in the old home
    But brings some tender mem'ry to me.
 
I'm homesick to-night, O how homesick,
    Never my tongue may tell,
Tho' my heart may break with longing
    For the scenes that I love so well;
But the dear old home in the valley
    Will be mine, O never again:
No more will its sunshine cheer me,
    And wishes and tears are in vain.

__Mrs. Ella Goodwin, Ludell.
 

"I go to books and to nature as a bee goes to the flower, for a nectar that I can make into my own honey."  John Burroughs

mrssherlock

  • Posts: 2007
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1804 on: August 22, 2010, 12:01:16 PM »
A different look at being homesick:   

"Green Green Grass Of Home"

The old home town looks the same as I step down from the train,
and there to meet me is my Mama and Papa.
Down the road I look and there runs Mary hair of gold and lips like cherries.
It's good to touch the green, green grass of home.
Yes, they'll all come to meet me, arms reaching, smiling sweetly.
It's good to touch the green, green grass of home.
The old house is still standing tho' the paint is cracked and dry,
and there's that old oak tree I used to play on.

Down the lane I walk with my sweet Mary, hair of gold and lips like cherries.
It's good to touch the green, green grass of home.
Yes, they'll all come to meet me, arms reaching, smiling sweetly.
It's good to touch the green, green grass of home.

Then I awake and look around me, at four grey wall surround me
and I realize that I was only dreaming.
For there's a guard and there's a sad old padre -
arm in arm we'll walk at daybreak.
Again I touch the green, green grass of home.
Yes, they'll all come to see me in the shade of that old oak tree
as they lay me neath the green, green grass of home.

Claude "Curly" Putman Jr.
Jackie
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. Edmund Burke

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1805 on: August 22, 2010, 02:24:36 PM »
Seems like as we age we have moved to another country even if our address is the same -  with so many changes to our cities, villages and county lanes, many of us think of our home as the one in our memory. It is more than simply how things look that has changed but how we interact with one another - it is not just technology and new products it is a change in what is valued - many values are the same but just as many have changed enough that we think of the life in our memory as simpler when it was probably just familiar and so we knew how to negotiate with each other - where as now it is less familiar and so we are negotiating two worlds - the current and the one in our memory - therefore, it is as if we have moved to another country.

Well to the country in our memory here is a poem by Carl Sandburg...

BACK YARD

SHINE on, O moon of summer.
Shine to the leaves of grass, catalpa and oak,
All silver under your rain to-night.

An Italian boy is sending songs to you to-night from an accordion.

A Polish boy is out with his best girl; they marry next
     month; to-night they are throwing you kisses.

An old man next door is dreaming over a sheen that sits in a cherry tree in his back yard.

The clocks say I must go--I stay here sitting on the
     back porch drinking white thoughts you rain down.

          Shine on, O moon,
Shake out more and more silver changes.



“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1806 on: August 22, 2010, 02:33:27 PM »
Here is another front porch poem...

Front Porch
          ~ by Theresa Morrow

My grandma's front porch
I remember it well
the hot days of summer
and gardenia bloom's smell

The place that aunts gathered
shelled peas and shucked corn,
told stories and laughed,
and the kittens were born

An escape from the sun
to drink cool lemonade
a break from the noise
and the games that we played

Enjoying the relief
of a rare summer breeze
It's the place that we patched
scraped elbows and knees

The sound of windchimes
and the squeaky screen door
The rocking chair's creak
on the chipped-painted floor

The place we could hide
From sudden rain showers
Make necklaces of clover
and hats from wildflowers

Or nap in the hammock
the best place to dream
waking from slumber
to homemade ice cream

Saying "good-bye" to cousins
as darkness rolled in
"I'll see you next weekend"
on the front porch again.
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1807 on: August 23, 2010, 09:34:35 AM »
Today is the First Day of School here in Austin.

In School-days
          ~ by John Greenleaf Whittier

John Greenleaf Whittier
Still sits the school-house by the road,
   A ragged beggar sleeping;
Around it still the sumachs grow,
   And blackberry-vines are creeping.

Within, the master’s desk is seen,
   Deep scarred by raps official;
The warping floor, the battered seats,
   The jack-knife’s carved initial;

The charcoal frescos on its wall;
   Its door’s worn sill, betraying
The feet that, creeping slow to school,
   Went storming out to playing!

Long years ago a winter sun
   Shone over it at setting;
Lit up its western window-panes,
   And low eaves’ icy fretting.

It touched the tangled golden curls,
   And brown eyes full of grieving,
Of one who still her steps delayed
   When all the school were leaving.

For near her stood the little boy
   Her childish favor singled:
His cap pulled low upon a face
   Where pride and shame were mingled.

Pushing with restless feet the snow
   To right and left, he lingered;—
As restlessly her tiny hands
   The blue-checked apron fingered.

He saw her lift her eyes; he felt
   The soft hand’s light caressing,
And heard the tremble of her voice,
   As if a fault confessing.

“I’m sorry that I spelt the word:
   I hate to go above you,
Because,”—the brown eyes lower fell,—
   “Because, you see, I love you!”

Still memory to a gray-haired man
   That sweet child-face is showing.
Dear girl! the grasses on her grave
   Have forty years been growing!

He lives to learn, in life’s hard school,
   How few who pass above him
Lament their triumph and his loss,
   Like her,—because they love him.
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1808 on: August 23, 2010, 09:44:36 AM »
I have always liked an look forward to the end of summer and early fall but I wonder if there is something sinister in the air. This  year in 2010 we have clashes on the street over the building of a Mosque  which only reminds me of the horror and sadness too easily set aside because it is so painful of other late summer and early fall mornings.

Ballad of Birmingham
          ~ By Dudley Randell (On the bombing of a church in Birmingham, Alabama, 1963)

"Mother dear, may I go downtown
Instead of out to play,
And march the streets of Birmingham
In a Freedom March today?"

"No, baby, no, you may not go,
For the dogs are fierce and wild,
And clubs and hoses, guns and jails
Aren't good for a little child."

"But, mother, I won't be alone.
Other children will go with me,
And march the streets of Birmingham
To make our country free."

"No, baby, no, you may not go,
For I fear those guns will fire.
But you may go to church instead
And sing in the children's choir."

She has combed and brushed her night-dark hair,
And bathed rose petal sweet,
And drawn white gloves on her small brown hands,
And white shoes on her feet.

The mother smiled to know that her child
Was in the sacred place,
But that smile was the last smile
To come upon her face.

For when she heard the explosion,
Her eyes grew wet and wild.
She raced through the streets of Birmingham
Calling for her child.

She clawed through bits of glass and brick,
Then lifted out a shoe.
"O, here's the shoe my baby wore,
But, baby, where are you?"

“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1809 on: August 23, 2010, 09:52:41 AM »
Eliot is not one of my favorite poets but he does have something to say and he says it very well...

Morning at the Window
          ~  T S Eliot

They are rattling breakfast plates in basement kitchens,
And along the trampled edges of the street
I am aware of the damp souls of housemaids
Sprouting despondently at area gates.

The brown waves of fog toss up to me
Twisted faces from the bottom of the street,
And tear from a passer-by with muddy skirts
An aimless smile that hovers in the air
And vanishes along the level of the roofs.

“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1810 on: August 23, 2010, 10:04:39 AM »
And in honor of Australia one of the latest nations to experience a hung election - the whole world and every nation appears to be philosophically split into equal and differing viewpoints.

The Australian Sunrise
The Morning Star paled slowly, the Cross hung low to the sea,
And down the shadowy reaches the tide came swirling free,
The lustrous purple blackness of the soft Australian night
Waned in the grey awakening that heralded the light;
Still in the dying darkness, still in the forest dim
The pearly dew of the dawning clung to each giant limb,
Till the sun came up from ocean, red with the cold sea mist,
And smote on the limestone ridges, and the shining tree-tops kissed
Then the fiery Scorpion vanished, the magpie’s note was heard,
And the wind in the she-oak wavered and the honeysuckles stirred;
The airy golden vapour rose from the river breast,
The kingfisher came darting out of his crannied nest,
And the bullrushes and reed-beds put off their sallow grey
And burnt with cloudy crimson at the dawning of the day.


The Cross—The constellation of the Southern Cross, which appears to become lower in the sky towards the morning. Rudyard Kipling has a similar phrase in The Native Born: “And the Cross swings low for the morn.”

The fiery Scorpion—The brilliant constellation Scorpio. It contains Antares, a star of the first magnitude, which shines with a reddish light.

 

“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

fairanna

  • Posts: 263
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1811 on: August 23, 2010, 12:11:04 PM »
Thanks to everyone for such wonderful nostalgic poetry My family  home was destroyed , along with whole areas of my home town when a SUPER HIGHWAY  replaced a large section ...blocks and blocks of where I grew up So the only way I can return is though my memory and my heart.

I came across a poem I wrote so I can share it with you

HURRY SEPTEMBER

August is still waiting to arrive
For me I hope it passes by
Moves fastly through the last hot days -
Summer's heat weighs me down-
Bloated with heat and humidity,
The days drag by.With anxious eye
I scan the sky-strain to see
Clouds in the northwest sky.
See my mother raise her head-
LIft it into the wind and say-
AH ! Autumn is near,the wind today
IS coming somewhere off of ice.
The August heated air blunts its
Arrival and will hold it back for awhile!
Stiil one day soon, standing on my deck-
I will feel a breeze lift my heat
Upon my neck and touch me with
A cooler hand and say --The wind today
Is  coming somewhere off of ice!
I hear me sigh with great relief,
And say so only I can hear-
Oh that sounds so nice----------

SEPTEMBER IS ALMOST HERE!

anna alexander
July 30 2008
3:07 PM

Gumtree

  • Posts: 2741
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1812 on: August 23, 2010, 12:37:52 PM »
Barbara: How nice of you to remember Australia like that - Cuthbertson is not well known these days. He wrote that poem sometime in the late 19th century - it's a different world now but nothing has changed so far as our sunrises are concerned - the brilliant Southern Cross is still there - as is

the lustrous purple blackness of the soft Australian night

perfect description.

I think the election resulting in a hung parliament is due to a protest vote against the present government for its mismanagement - the opposition gained many seats and some of the protest vote went to minor parties. Some seats are still in doubt. It will be a couple of weeks before all counting is completed - the overseas postal vote doesn't close until next week sometime.... the journos are having a field day - every day.
Reading is an art and the reader an artist. Holbrook Jackson

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1813 on: August 23, 2010, 09:17:49 PM »
Found this - not Pulitzer Prize worthy but says it after another day of 106 with promises of 106 minimum tomorrow - Heat Index [temp plus humidity]  will be 112 to 113 - and then - maybe - just maybe - a cold front is expected that will bring the temps down to 96 - I know - only 96 but hay that is 10 degrees cooler and if it happens they predict that we will have seen the last over 100 degree day for this year...

A Day in a Texas Heat Wave
          ~ Jeff Haby

After sunrise-
The air feels sticky,
Like honey drying and thick.

Texas heat gradually builds
As noontime approaches-
Heat such as in a warming oven
Or a roaring fire.

The heat and humidity combine
To a heat index of one-o-nine.
Sweat drips from every brow.
How a normal human can handle it-
I don't know how.

The sun is still only halfway
Across the sky.
Weak grass and bushes
Begin to wilt and die.

The temperature reaches 100 again.
Only sunset gives relief
From the red hot
Sunburning thief.

Praying tomorrow will be the day
That there will be rain
Because another 14 hours of the sun's ray
Will send a few more people insane.

Even with air conditioning
A Texas heat wave can be so frustrating.



 
 
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

Gumtree

  • Posts: 2741
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1814 on: August 24, 2010, 05:17:08 AM »
Don't know about a Texas heatwave but that poem could be applied to a heatwave anywhere in Australia (except perhaps in Tasmania).

I really feel for those who are suffering hot and humid weather -but right now I'm longing for some warm weather as we've had a long and cold winter - but I know that from December through to end of March I'll be moaning about the high temps.
Reading is an art and the reader an artist. Holbrook Jackson

Babi

  • Posts: 6732
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1815 on: August 24, 2010, 08:43:38 AM »
I loved that song, JACKIE. Sad, gentle and nostalgic. You have to
wonder how a man with that background; loving family, friends and lover,
would wind up in a death cell.

 
Quote
"we think of the life in our memory as simpler when it was probably just familiar and so we knew how to negotiate with each other.."
BARB, that is a very insightful thought. I believe you're right.

 I read this mornings offerings, and I think to myself that this is why we
love poets.  No matter what is on our minds or in our hearts, the poet
can express it for us.
"I go to books and to nature as a bee goes to the flower, for a nectar that I can make into my own honey."  John Burroughs

mrssherlock

  • Posts: 2007
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1816 on: August 24, 2010, 11:27:03 AM »
Salem youngsters start school in two weeks, after the harvest.   San Jose, where I grew up, is in the Santa Clara Valley which in the 40's was known as "The Valley of Heart's Delight", filled with fruit tree orchards, beautiful beyond words when in bloom.  http://www.mariposaresearch.net/santaclararesearch/ Harvesting the fruit was too important to allow school to interfere, first day was late in September when I was young.
Jackie
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. Edmund Burke

bellemere

  • Posts: 862
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1817 on: August 28, 2010, 03:49:39 PM »
Get the Dish

A  welcome summer- night command
When the Philadelphia temperature  sweltered
Even after the sun had set; not a breeze or a drop of rain
To make the evening bearable. 
But the corner store on the avenue
Waited with open door for the ice cream couriers,
Dispatched with the biggest serving bowl in the house.
 Fleet of foot, strong on memory.
They raced for the precious scoops:
Never forgetting who wanted chocolate, peach, black raspberry
And then  the careful trek  back home
Up sidewalks still giving off the scorching heat
Past the white railing- porches of the row houses,
The wind chimes,   the creaking green rocking chairs,
 The Phillies game on the radio, 
The greetings from the humid darkness.

-bellemere

bellemere

  • Posts: 862
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1818 on: August 29, 2010, 09:05:58 AM »
Maybe this was written for fairanna:

Ode to the End of  Summer
              Phyllis McGinley

Summer, adieu!
                      Adieu, gregarious season.
Goodbye, revoir, farewell.
Now day comes late; now chillier blows the breeze on
Forsaken beach and boarded-up hotel.
Now wild geese fly together in thin lines
And Tourist Homes take down their lettered signs.

It fades- this green, this lavish interval,
This time of flowers and fruits,
Of melons ripe along the orchard wall,
Of sun and sails and wrinkled linen suits;
Time when the world seems rather plus than minus
And pollen tickles the allergic sinus.
 
Now fugitives to farm and shore and highland
Cancel their brief escape.
The Ferris Wheel is quiet at Coney Island
And quaintness trades no longer on the Cape;
While meek-eyed parents hasten down the ramps
To greet their offspring, terrible from camps.

Turn up the steam, the year is growing older,
The maple boughs are red,
Summer farewell!  Farewell the sunburnt shoulder,
Farewell the pleasant kerchief on the head,
Farewell the thunderstorm, complete with lightening
And the white shoe that ever needeth whitening.

Farewell, vacation friendships, sweet but tenuous,
Ditto to slacks and shorts
Farewell , O strange compulsion to be strenuous,
Which sends us forth to death on tennis courts.
Farewell, mosquito, horror of our  nights,
Clambakes, iced tea, and transatlantic flights.

Unstintingly, I yield myself to autumn
And Equinoctial sloth.
I hide my swimsuit in the bureau’s bottom,
Nor fear the fury of the aftermoth.
Forswearing porch and pool and beetled garden,
My heart shall rest, my arteries shall harden.

Welcome, kind Fall, and every month with “r” in
Whereto my mind is bent.
Come, sedentary season that I star in,
O firelit Winter of my deep content.
Amid the snows, the sleet, the blizzard’s raw gust
I shall be cozier than I was in August.
Safe from the picnic sleeps the unlittered dell,
The last Good Humour sounds its final bell.
And all is silent.  Summer, farewell, farewell.




Babi

  • Posts: 6732
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1819 on: August 29, 2010, 11:06:04 AM »
 A fascinating poem, BELLE.  I've never heard of being able to go to
the store with a bowl and order ice cream by the scoop.  I hope the
bowl was chilled; better chance of getting the ice cream home unmelted.
  Phyllis McGinley's poem was a lot of fun. Being 'sent to death on
tennis courts' and no fear of the "aftermoth", and welcoming "the Winter
of my 'deep content'"  This lady is fun.

  I found this late August poem.  Time is almost up for August.


"August rushes by like desert rainfall,
A flood of frenzied upheaval,
Expected,
But still catching me unprepared.
Like a matchflame
Bursting on the scene,
Heat and haze of crimson sunsets.
Like a dream
Of moon and dark barely recalled,
A moment,
Shadows caught in a blink.
Like a quick kiss;
One wishes for more
But it suddenly turns to leave,
Dragging summer away."
-  Elizabeth Maua Taylor 

"I go to books and to nature as a bee goes to the flower, for a nectar that I can make into my own honey."  John Burroughs

bellemere

  • Posts: 862
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1820 on: August 29, 2010, 11:24:14 AM »
I can't remember if Nana chilled "The Dish" or not. I do know that my brothr in law was teased as "cheap" because he nver bought ice cream for his own family, but at the home of the girl he was courting he was known as "Get the Dish Joey"  in family folklore.

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1821 on: August 29, 2010, 02:04:04 PM »
The temps may not be saying end of summer but the calendar is sure saying the end of summer and heat or not the football fields are alive.

Your poem Bellemere reminds me the first time our family learned of Black Raspberry Ice cream - up until then the only flavors available were Chocolate, Vanilla and Strawberry - it was the summer of 1939 and my mother and her sister with all the cousins spent two months in a rented house in the mountains  including the cousins from a thrid sister who could not come - our fathers came up every other weekend - we often took long walks to the nearby town where sometimes we were treated to an ice-cream cone - we noticed folks licking this purplish ice cream and asked about it - sure enough it was Black Raspberry and so from then on it was the flavor of choice - it wasn't till the Spring when I was in the second grade, 1941 that we learned of a Howard Johnson ice cream store on a busy road to a nearby town that sold an incredible number of flavors - I remember my mother always ordering Pecan while my sister and I flirted with Peach or Cherry.

The End of Summer
          ~ by Rachel Hadas

Sweet smell of phlox drifting across the lawn—
an early warning of the end of summer.
August is fading fast, and by September
the little purple flowers will all be gone.

Season, project, and vacation done.
One more year in everybody’s life.
Add a notch to the old hunting knife
Time keeps testing with a horny thumb.

Over the summer months hung an unspoken
aura of urgency. In late July
galactic pulsings filled the midnight sky
like silent screaming, so that, strangely woken,

we looked at one another in the dark,
then at the milky magical debris
arcing across, dwarfing our meek mortality.
There were two ways to live: get on with work,

redeem the time, ignore the imminence
of cataclysm; or else take it slow,
be as tranquil as the neighbors’ cow
we love to tickle through the barbed wire fence
(she paces through her days in massive innocence,
or, seeing green pastures, we imagine so).

In fact, not being cows, we have no choice.
Summer or winter, country, city, we
are prisoners from the start and automatically,
hemmed in, harangued by the one clamorous voice.

Not light but language shocks us out of sleep
ideas of doom transformed to meteors
we translate back to portents of the wars
looming above the nervous watch we keep.

“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

Babi

  • Posts: 6732
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1822 on: August 30, 2010, 09:16:23 AM »
  I remember when there were only three flavors of ice cream, but I can't
remember what flavor was the first to join them.  Probably a fruit, like
peach.  I do remember turning that crank to make homemade ice cream.
Probably the only chore we kids did cheerfully.   ;)
 
"I go to books and to nature as a bee goes to the flower, for a nectar that I can make into my own honey."  John Burroughs

bellemere

  • Posts: 862
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1823 on: August 30, 2010, 10:10:15 AM »
Peach was my favorite; it seems to have disappeared.  But summer and ice cream are still  linked, aren't they?  In spite of all the cholesterol warnings.

JoanK

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 8685
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1824 on: August 30, 2010, 03:30:28 PM »
Yes! August and ice cream!

JoanK

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 8685
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1825 on: August 30, 2010, 03:32:57 PM »
Before summer is over, I need to post some of my favoprite summer haiku.

How easily it lights up,
How easily it goes out,
The firefly

Chora

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1826 on: August 30, 2010, 05:50:34 PM »
Oh yes, Joan - Summer Haiku!

I wrote this some years ago - if  you never lived in the South you may not get it but it is a piece of summer fun.

A Geico skitters
boys have grown and moved away
Geico has a tail.
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

bellemere

  • Posts: 862
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1827 on: August 30, 2010, 06:19:15 PM »
Coming all too soon - the storms of the equinox:  line storms

A Line-Storm Song by Robert Frost
   The line-storm clouds fly tattered and swift,
The road is forlorn all day,
Where a myriad snowy quartz stones lift,
And the hoof-prints vanish away.
The roadside flowers, too wet for the bee,
Expend their bloom in vain.
Come over the hills and far with me,
And be my love in the rain.

The birds have less to say for themselves
In the wood-world’s torn despair
Than now these numberless years the elves,
Although they are no less there:
All song of the woods is crushed like some
Wild, easily shattered rose.
Come, be my love in the wet woods; come,
Where the boughs rain when it blows.

There is the gale to urge behind
And bruit our singing down,
And the shallow waters aflutter with wind
From which to gather your gown.
What matter if we go clear to the west,
And come not through dry-shod?
For wilding brooch shall wet your breast
The rain-fresh goldenrod.

Oh, never this whelming east wind swells
But it seems like the sea’s return
To the ancient lands where it left the shells
Before the age of the fern;
And it seems like the time when after doubt
Our love came back amain.
Oh, come forth into the storm and rout
And be my love in the rain.

Robert Frost

 

 
 
   
 

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1828 on: August 30, 2010, 10:33:25 PM »
What a beautiful couple of lines -

"And the shallow waters aflutter with wind
From which to gather your gown."
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1829 on: August 31, 2010, 01:56:11 PM »

 
THE END OF SUMMER
          ~ Shannon Georgia Schaubroeck,

The summer days are fading, as they must
From endless hours to short and fleeting light
The bird's once bright, immortal tune, now cries
A melancholy aura to the dusk
The children fiercely climb, and dream, and race
Before their wild and unchained days depart
And yet beneath the zeal lies a half heart
For there isn't time, there's only enough space
The sun seems low, a hazy orange sphere
Now reminiscing sweetly of the days
When endlessly before you summer lay
And as in the deep, crimson dusk you stir
Your soul joins with the birds in wistful brood
Crying for lost summer days, for childhood


 
 
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

JoanK

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 8685
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1830 on: August 31, 2010, 06:30:48 PM »
Barbara: I never lived in the South, but I had boys, so I figured it out. Made me laugh.

What lovely poems.

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1831 on: August 31, 2010, 09:58:14 PM »
What is really funny is to see the oldest boy when he was young look incredulous when he thought he captured a lizard and comes  up with a tail. Then the temptation is like telling younger brothers about Santa. What is even more amazing is how the boys really believe if they try harder to catch it higher on its body they will be successful.  I realized soon it was just a boy thing that they keep on attempting till they are near the end of their High School years and they can drive a car. That is when all childhood challengers are shoved aside.

Farm Boy After Summer
          ~ by Robert Francis

A seated statue of himself he seems.
A bronze slowness becomes him. Patently
The page he contemplates he doesn't see.

The lesson, the long lesson, has been summer.
His mind holds summer, as his skin holds sun.
For once the homework, all of it, was done.

What were the crops, where were the fiery fields
Where for so many days so many hours
The sun assaulted him with glittering showers.

Expect a certain absence in his presence.
Expect all winter long a summer scholar,
For scarcely all its snows can cool that color
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1832 on: August 31, 2010, 10:06:11 PM »
RAIN IN SUMMER
          ~ by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

How beautiful is the rain!
After the dust and heat,
In the broad and fiery street,
In the narrow lane,
How beautiful is the rain!

How it clatters along the roofs,
Like the tramp of hoofs
How it gushes and struggles out
From the throat of the overflowing spout!

Across the window-pane
It pours and pours;
And swift and wide,
With a muddy tide,
Like a river down the gutter roars
The rain, the welcome rain!

The sick man from his chamber looks
At the twisted brooks;
He can feel the cool
Breath of each little pool;
His fevered brain
Grows calm again,
And he breathes a blessing on the rain.

From the neighboring school
Come the boys,
With more than their wonted noise
And commotion;
And down the wet streets
Sail their mimic fleets,
Till the treacherous pool
Ingulfs them in its whirling
And turbulent ocean.

In the country, on every side,
Where far and wide,
Like a leopard's tawny and spotted hide,
Stretches the plain,
To the dry grass and the drier grain
How welcome is the rain!

In the furrowed land
The toilsome and patient oxen stand;
Lifting the yoke encumbered head,
With their dilated nostrils spread,
They silently inhale
The clover-scented gale,
And the vapors that arise
From the well-watered and smoking soil.
For this rest in the furrow after toil
Their large and lustrous eyes
Seem to thank the Lord,
More than man's spoken word.

Near at hand,
From under the sheltering trees,
The farmer sees
His pastures, and his fields of grain,
As they bend their tops
To the numberless beating drops
Of the incessant rain.
He counts it as no sin
That he sees therein
Only his own thrift and gain.

These, and far more than these,
The Poet sees!
He can behold
Aquarius old
Walking the fenceless fields of air;
And from each ample fold
Of the clouds about him rolled
Scattering everywhere
The showery rain,
As the farmer scatters his grain.

He can behold
Things manifold
That have not yet been wholly told,--
Have not been wholly sung nor said.
For his thought, that never stops,
Follows the water-drops
Down to the graves of the dead,
Down through chasms and gulfs profound,
To the dreary fountain-head
Of lakes and rivers under ground;
And sees them, when the rain is done,
On the bridge of colors seven
Climbing up once more to heaven,
Opposite the setting sun.

Thus the Seer,
With vision clear,
Sees forms appear and disappear,
In the perpetual round of strange,
Mysterious change
From birth to death, from death to birth,
From earth to heaven, from heaven to earth;
Till glimpses more sublime
Of things, unseen before,
Unto his wondering eyes reveal
The Universe, as an immeasurable wheel
Turning forevermore
In the rapid and rushing river of Time.
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1833 on: August 31, 2010, 10:17:07 PM »
The last of Summer is Delight --
          ~ by Emily Dickinson

The last of Summer is Delight --
Deterred by Retrospect.
'Tis Ecstasy's revealed Review --
Enchantment's Syndicate.

To meet it -- nameless as it is --
Without celestial Mail --
Audacious as without a Knock
To walk within the Veil.

“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

Babi

  • Posts: 6732
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1834 on: September 01, 2010, 09:04:42 AM »
The children fiercely climb, and dream, and race
Before their wild and unchained days depart

Ah, so true. I remember.
"I go to books and to nature as a bee goes to the flower, for a nectar that I can make into my own honey."  John Burroughs

bellemere

  • Posts: 862
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1835 on: September 01, 2010, 10:55:52 AM »
There seems to be a school of educational thought that the summer vacation is bad for the kids; they can't retain that they have learned.  This makes the country less competitive.  So we should do away with it?  That will be a tough fight, but more and more working moms would go for it.  (Glad I got my long childhood summers in, aren't you?)

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1836 on: September 01, 2010, 12:52:37 PM »
Without summer I wonder how a child learns to amuse themselves and live life using their own integrity and free time rather than living their entire formative years within a scheduled system.

Too bad the school systems of this nation do not all own and run a camp - if every child with working parents could have a month in the out of doors learning to swim and identify the birds and trees with time to just lay on the ground and watch ants without the fear of strangers then I think children would have a more rounded understanding of themselves, others and the world they live in. Of course ranch and farm kids have that experience so once again there cannot be a national schedule established for all children.

Well this is one of those days when I am not getting  much accomplished - I am about ready to throw in the towel and take a nap because even my disposition is down - it is pretty bad when  you get angry at the weather - we keep getting promised showers and none appear - we were told over a week ago we were experiencing the last of the 100 day temps - well  no rain and still 100s - now they are saying Friday a front should bring showers and temps in the mid 90s - I am tired of dry and I am tired of planning based on the heat of the day - but mostly I think I am just plain cranky -

Afternoon Nap
          ~ David Shumate  

It is like finding a hole in the universe. A door nobody else knows about.
You swimg it open and crawl through into the streets of a small town. You
pass the barbershop. The pharmacy. The bank. The grocery. Maybe a
row of grain elevators on the edge of town. All the houses are white.
People are sitting out on their porches as if theyve been expecting you.
They wave and say a few words. Some ask you to come up and visit for a
time. They want to know what you were doing before you fell asleep and
what you plan on donig when you wake up. Theyre fascinated by it all.
Sleep is the sole religion of this town. Icons of their reclining saints are
everywhere. On Sundays even the infirm gather their pillows and blankets
and walk to church to lie down on the pews and worship their great and
slumbering god. Its such a pleasant place, you almost hate to leave.

“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

Tomereader1

  • Posts: 1870
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1837 on: September 01, 2010, 01:23:39 PM »
"of sun and sails and wrinkled linen suits"...that is such a magical line, spoken aloud. Loved that poem.
The reading of a fine book is an uninterrupted dialogue in which the book speaks and our soul replies.


André Maurois

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1838 on: September 01, 2010, 04:51:26 PM »
Yes Tomereader that is a wonderful line full of lovely imagery -

OK I need to fill up the next two posts and then reserve the top of the next page for the new heading that will be ready as soon as I get a SeniorLearner link to the graphic.

The Bee Boy's Song
          ~  by Rudyard Kipling

Bees! Bees! Hark to your bees!
'Hide from your neighbours as much as you please,
But all that has happened, to us you must tell,
Or else we will give you no honey to sell!'

A Maiden in her glory,
Upon her wedding-day,
Must tell her Bees the story,
Or else they'll fly away.
Fly away - die away -
Dwindle down and leave you!
But if you don't deceive your Bees,
Your Bees will not deceive you.

Marriage, birth or buryin',
News across the seas,
All you're sad or merry in,
You must tell the Bees.
Tell 'em coming in an' out,
Where the Fanners fan,
'Cause the Bees are justabout
As curious as a man!

Don't you wait where trees are,
When the lightnings play;
Nor don't you hate where Bees are,
Or else they'll pine away.
Pine away - dwine away -
Anything to leave you!
But if you never grieve your Bees,
Your Bees'll never grieve you!
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

  • BooksDL
  • Posts: 11375
  • Keep beauty alive...
    • Piled on Tables and Floors and Bureau Drawers
Re: Poetry Page
« Reply #1839 on: September 01, 2010, 04:53:48 PM »
Quiet Riot
          ~ by McCartte

Quietly I stand in the warm sunlight
quietly I become a part of their riot
out and in and out again
Dancing and wiggling, chin to chin
Whirling and twirling
a twist and a spin
go this way then that
all to an end
Gather and carry
place to place I roam
stop here, stop there,
then carry it home.
In thru the door,
my burden undone
task to task,to each his own.
Work, ah work, it's never all done

“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe