The Art of Poetry No. 35
“Literature is not different from life, it is part of life. And for someone like myself, The Odyssey is as much a part of nature as the Aegean.”
“Literature is not different from life, it is part of life. And for someone like myself, The Odyssey is as much a part of nature as the Aegean.”
Snow fell all night and suddenly there was morning:
a startling vision from a familiar window,
while yet an ordinary sight: a
neighboring hill had become itself more
Like the old phoenix which, the more it got
Burnt up, (recycling its own stuff, no doubt,
For it did not burn down) the more it grew—
To sing old songs to little children in
A foreign language made intime thereby;
To pose a riddle, putting one more spin
Cast from a simile of Paul of Tarsus
Thence depicted as an anchor (ancora
Speme—there’s still hope—get it?) and by suchlike
Gleaming in Monday evening candlelight.
Glass and plate and conversation and good
Fortune then unacknowledged even by
Tired now, by candlelight and in the grip
Of much undoing to be done, we strip
Away at varnish, burn old wills and deeds,
“Mère d’amour et fille de la Mer!”
Over the golden ocean waves of hair
Plunge, bright with her origin, where we
The breaking of things can look like an origination
But then reveal itself, through lights shimmering in fragments
Of smashed glass, as having occurred too late to have given
Once, but once, did I fail my Muse, who, lying
(Golden-shadowed shape) by the flaring candle,
Urged me upward. But there was more to dying
Ruins are what we make of them, and wrecked
Imaginations could want to do so little
With any real rubble. Acres of crumbled bricks,
These cliffs, how glorious, Helen! We have driven
Along this route together often enough
Not to have missed this spot before, or given
The dark gray receding tide uncovers
New reaches of white sand, and underfoot
Dry bony driftwood moves into the shade
The silly fish deceived him
As he approached the creel:
He thought the whole thing real
I once saw weeping in a wood
The bears that break the heart of God
When dusty grapes hung from the trees