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bjbdbest
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

That is a great line to ponder upon, Dave.
There is a big difference between solitude and loneliness.

In solitude one can be happy to be alone yet it's quite the
opposite feeling lonely.
Solitude can be a time for reflection and self-awareness
whereas loneliness brings a sense of emptiness and loss.

Wordsworth expressed it in perfect poetic form.
Thank you, Neil.
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William LeGro
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

Elegy with a Bridle in Its Hand
by Larry Levis

One was a bay cowhorse from Piedra & the other was a washed-out palomino
And both stood at the rail of the corral & both went on aging
In each effortless tail swish, the flies rising, then congregating again

Around their eyes & muzzles and withers.

Their front teeth were by now yellow as antique piano keys & slanted to the angle
Of shingles on the maze of sheds & barn around them; their puckered

Chins were round & black as frostbitten oranges hanging unpicked from the limbs
Of trees all through winter like a comment of winter itself on everything
That led to it & found gradually the way out again.

In the slowness of time. Black time to white, & rind to blossom.
Deity is in the details & we are details among other details & we long to be

Teased out of ourselves. And become all of them.

The bay had worms once & had acquired the habit of drinking orange soda
From an uptilted bottle & nibbling cookies from the flat of a hand, & liked to do
Nothing else now, & the palomino liked to do nothing but gaze off

At traffic going past on the road beyond vineyards & it would follow each car
With a slight turning of its neck, back & forth, as if it were a thing

Of great interest to him.

If I rode them, the palomino would stumble & wheeze when it broke
Into a trot & would relapse into a walk after a second or two & then stop
Completely & without cause; the bay would keep going though it creaked

Underneath me like a rocking chair of dry, frail wood, & when I knew it could no longer
Continue but did so anyway, or when the palomino would stop & then take

Only a step or two when I nudged it forward again, I would slip off either one of them,
Riding bareback, & walk them slowly back, letting them pause when they wanted to.

At dawn in winter sometimes there would be a pane of black ice covering
The surface of the water trough & they would nudge it with their noses or muzzles,
And stare at it as if they were capable of wonder or bewilderment.

They were worthless. They were the motionless dusk & the motionless

Moonlight, & in the moonlight they were other worlds. Worlds uninhabited
And without visitors. Worlds that would cock an ear a moment
When the migrant workers come back at night to the sheds they were housed in

And turn a radio on, but only for a moment before going back to whatever

Wordless & tuneless preoccupation involved them.

The palomino was called Misfit & the bay was named Querido Flacco,
And the names of some of the other shapes had been Rockabye
And Ojo Pendejo & Cue Ball & Back Door Peter & Frenchfry & Sandman

And Rolling Ghost & Anastasia.

Death would come for both of them with its bridle of clear water in hand
And they would not look up from grazing on some patch of dry grass or even

Acknowledge it much; & for a while I began to think that the world

Rested on a limitless ossuary of horses where their bones & skulls stretched
And fused until only the skeleton of one enormous horse underlay
The smoke of cities & the cold branches of trees & the distant

Whine of traffic on the interstate.

If I & by implication therefore anyone who looked at them long enough at dusk
Or in moonlight he would know the idea of heaven & of life everlasting
Was so much blown straw or momentary confetti

At the unhappy wedding of a sister.

Heaven was neither the light nor was it the air, & if it took a physical form
It was splintered lumber no one could build anything with.

Heaven was a weight behind the eyes & one would have to stare right through it
Until he saw the air itself, just air, the clarity that took the shackles from his eyes
And the taste of the bit from his mouth & knocked the rider off his back

So he could walk for once in his life.

Or just stand there for a moment before he became something else, some
Flyspeck on the wall of a passing & uninterruptible history whose sounds claimed
To be a cheering from bleachers but were actually no more than the noise

Of cars entering the mouth of a tunnel.

And in the years that followed he would watch them in the backstretch or the far turn
At Santa Anita or Del Mar. Watch the way they made it all seem effortless.

Watch the way they were explosive and untiring.

And then watch the sun fail him again & slip from the world, & watch
The stands slowly empty. As if all moments came back to this one, inexplicably
To this one out of all he might have chosen -- Heaven with ashes in its hair

And filling what were once its eyes -- this one with its torn tickets
Littering the aisles & the soft racket the wind made. This one. Which was his.

And if the voice of a broken king were to come in the dusk & whisper
To the world, that grandstand with its thousands of empty seats,

Who among the numberless you have become desires this moment

Which comprehends nothing more than loss & fragility & the fleeing of flesh?

He would have to look up at the quickening dark & say: Me. I do. It's mine.



Elegy
Larry Levis
Copyright 1997 University of Pittsburgh Press
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[Edit 1 times, last edit by William LeGro at Nov 25, 2014 11:21:24 PM]
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NAP2614
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

Elegy with a Bridle in Its Hand
by Larry Levis


Thank you William LeGro for that. Larry was but 49 when he died but wrote like he carried the wisdom of twice that. I enjoy his farm/vinyard/migrant workers youth he experienced, and his works hit very close to home.
nap
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William LeGro
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

I feel the same way about Larry Levis, nap - lines like Heaven with ashes in its hair/And filling what were once its eyes, and if the voice of a broken king were to come in the dusk & whisper/To the world - in fact the last 10 lines kind of stop my throat with their beauty. In another poem, "Anastasia & Sandman," he actually addresses Members of the Committee on the Ineffable. Anything that's ineffable is supposed to be beyond the powers of human expression, but I guess Levis didn't get the memo.
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William LeGro
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

Another Night in the Ruins
by Galway Kinnell

1
In the evening
haze darkening on the hills,
purple
of the eternal, a last bird
crosses over, '€˜flop flop,€™'
adoring
only the instant.

2
Nine years ago,
in a plane that rumbled all night
above the Atlantic,
I could see, lit up
by lightning bolts jumping out of it,
a thunderhead formed like the face
of my brother, looking nostalgically down
on blue,
lightning-flashed moments of the Atlantic.

3
He used to tell me,
"€œWhat good is the day?
On some hill of despair
the bonfire
you kindle can light the great sky--”
though it'€™s true, of course, to make it burn
you have to throw yourself in . . . "€

4
Wind tears itself hollow
in the eaves of my ruins, ghost-flute
of snowdrifts
that build out there in the dark:
upside-down
ravines into which night sweeps
our torn wings, our ink-spattered feathers.

5
I listen.
I hear nothing. Only
the cow, the cow
of nothingness, mooing
down the bones.

6
Is that a
rooster? He
thrashes in the snow
for a grain. Finds
it. Rips
it into
flames. Flaps. Crows.
Flames
bursting out of his brow.

7
How many nights must it take
one such as me to learn
that we aren'€™t, after all, made
from that bird which flies out of its ashes,
that for a man
as he goes up in flames, his one work
is
to open himself, to be
the flames?


Body Rags
Galway Kinnell
Houghton Miflin Company, Boston
1968
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David Autumns
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

Please take this nagging thing away, it's dead
No-one is impressed by the quota in my head

I would do it myself with slammed door and cotton
But after the work you've done it ain't that rotten

Please take it from my jaw
So it pains my maw no more

Dave they ask "Why so glum?"
"Ook hey ave left it in ma gum"
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bjbdbest
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

Elegy took my breath away. How it hits one in the face without
disguise. How the idea to write about the reality of life through
the horses was brilliant! An awakening in prose that makes you
shake your head and hold tightly to the day.
It had great impact on me.
...and Body Rags - Stunning and insightful.
So glad to have you here, William :)


Dental Dave - I believe that's what you call "comic relief" ...
and it works biggrin
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bjbdbest
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

Spellbound
-Emily Bronte

The night is darkening round me,
The wild winds coldly blow;
But a tyrant spell has bound me
And I cannot, cannot go.

The giant trees are bending
Their bare boughs weighed with snow.
And the storm is fast descending,
And yet I cannot go.

Clouds beyond clouds above me,
Wastes beyond wastes below;
But nothing drear can move me;
I will not, cannot go.
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David Autumns
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

Oh what blessed relief
Now that I have one less of my teeth
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bjbdbest
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Re: Poetry - just poetry ....

Glad you're feeling better, Dave but tell me - did you happen to go to Dentist Dan?
....sorry, couldn't resist....


Nentis Nan, he's my man,
I go do im each chanz I gan.
He sicks me down an creans my teed
Wid mabel syrub, tick an' sweed,
An ten he filks my cavakies
Wid choclut cangy -- I tink he's
The graygest nentis in the lan.
Le's hear free jeers for Nentis Nan.
Pip-pip-ooray!
Pip-pip-ooray!
Pip-pip-ooray! Le's go to Nentis Nan dooday!

-Shel Silverstein
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