11 hours ago
Saturday, June 28, 2014
Poetry Saturday
Yesterday was another travel day for me, so no post, but here is what everyone else posted.
Friday, June 20, 2014
Poetry Friday
Today is a road-trip day, and I am probably not going to get a Poetry Friday post written. But here's today's roundup, so you can go read what everyone else is posting! Happy Friday!
Friday, June 13, 2014
Poetry Friday: Chikungunya Revisited
I said a few weeks ago that maybe I would write my own chikungunya poem, and now I have. For anyone who isn't yet aware of this virus, here is some good information. Here is a recent summary of the situation in the Caribbean, and predictions of this nasty virus coming to the United States.
Everyone in our household except one has now had the fever (and yes, I've had it, too). My husband had a particularly bad case, and was the inspiration for my poem.
My Husband Gets Chikungunya
Everyone’s getting it,
And then Steve does too.
The virus is a mosquito-borne history lesson,
A recap of all the injuries this body in its fifties has sustained.
The right arm that snapped while playing airplanes with Don
The summer between first and second grade,
Now aches as though Steve has once more been propelled through the air
And crash landed.
The two fingers broken in a car accident in college,
When, going too fast, he went off a bridge on a back road in Tennessee,
And the collar bone from that same impact,
Burn again with pain as he relives that night,
A blur of memory now:
Crawling out of his car;
The nurse fainting
As she held his bloody hand, nerves exposed;
Calling his mother.
Random knee injuries and ankle sprains
From years of basketball and softball
Return to haunt him
As he lies in bed, feverish and exhausted.
Some of these wounds predate me,
Like the conked head from falling out of a shopping cart as a two year old,
But some I was around for,
Like the broken coccyx on a cycling trip.
All, all hurt again,
As though to say,
Congratulations on surviving, zanmi mwen,
Tough old guy,
How many times could you have died already?
How blessed are you?
He moans, takes Tylenol, drinks the water I bring him,
And emerges,
Victorious,
Spent and covered in a rash,
From the ordeal of
Chikungunya.
Today's roundup is here.
Everyone in our household except one has now had the fever (and yes, I've had it, too). My husband had a particularly bad case, and was the inspiration for my poem.
Everyone’s getting it,
And then Steve does too.
The virus is a mosquito-borne history lesson,
A recap of all the injuries this body in its fifties has sustained.
The right arm that snapped while playing airplanes with Don
The summer between first and second grade,
Now aches as though Steve has once more been propelled through the air
And crash landed.
The two fingers broken in a car accident in college,
When, going too fast, he went off a bridge on a back road in Tennessee,
And the collar bone from that same impact,
Burn again with pain as he relives that night,
A blur of memory now:
Crawling out of his car;
The nurse fainting
As she held his bloody hand, nerves exposed;
Calling his mother.
Random knee injuries and ankle sprains
From years of basketball and softball
Return to haunt him
As he lies in bed, feverish and exhausted.
Some of these wounds predate me,
Like the conked head from falling out of a shopping cart as a two year old,
But some I was around for,
Like the broken coccyx on a cycling trip.
All, all hurt again,
As though to say,
Congratulations on surviving, zanmi mwen,
Tough old guy,
How many times could you have died already?
How blessed are you?
He moans, takes Tylenol, drinks the water I bring him,
And emerges,
Victorious,
Spent and covered in a rash,
From the ordeal of
Chikungunya.
Today's roundup is here.
Friday, June 06, 2014
Poetry Friday: Slowing Down
On Monday I finished up in my classroom, and I have spent the days since shifting into the rhythms of the summer. We will be traveling, but for the moment I have been straightening up my house, exercising, hanging out with my kids, and reading. During the school year, I feel as though I am stealing time to read, but in the summer I can relax a little, start in on the stack that has been accumulating by my bed.
Today, as I was riding the exercise bike, I was listening to the Poem of the Day podcast (you can find it on iTunes). I'm catching up on April's podcasts still, and on April 5th, Australian poet Mark Tredinnick is featured reading his poem "Eclogues." This is a poem for the summer me: it's long, discursive, about work and family and landscape. You can read the poem, and hear him read it, here. The recording lasts just over eight minutes.
My dictionary defines eclogue as "a short poem, especially a pastoral dialogue." It appears as though Tredinnick has written many eclogues. I confess I had never heard of him before this morning, but I will be delving more into his work.
This poem describes Tredinnick's journeys back and forth from his house to the shed where he writes. He illustrates for us his routine, the focus on work, the return to his family, and gradually, he talks about the country around him, and mortality (a friend who died, a friend who has cancer), and then he ends with a beautiful metaphor of landscape as poetry.
It's hard to excerpt a poem like this, because the point is the whole, but here are some bits I liked:
Its balm inside and search again briefly for the frequency of family life
7
You’d call it a blessing if you hadn’t been woken four times
The river has told the grass again, a parable the day has forgotten by nine.
21
But, listen: no one reads poems to learn how to vote. Verse can’t change
Today, as I was riding the exercise bike, I was listening to the Poem of the Day podcast (you can find it on iTunes). I'm catching up on April's podcasts still, and on April 5th, Australian poet Mark Tredinnick is featured reading his poem "Eclogues." This is a poem for the summer me: it's long, discursive, about work and family and landscape. You can read the poem, and hear him read it, here. The recording lasts just over eight minutes.
My dictionary defines eclogue as "a short poem, especially a pastoral dialogue." It appears as though Tredinnick has written many eclogues. I confess I had never heard of him before this morning, but I will be delving more into his work.
This poem describes Tredinnick's journeys back and forth from his house to the shed where he writes. He illustrates for us his routine, the focus on work, the return to his family, and gradually, he talks about the country around him, and mortality (a friend who died, a friend who has cancer), and then he ends with a beautiful metaphor of landscape as poetry.
It's hard to excerpt a poem like this, because the point is the whole, but here are some bits I liked:
5
Its balm inside and search again briefly for the frequency of family life
and I find it in the bath, my girl
and our three children, sleek as seals,
and in that moment a truck passes on the road
and snaps the powerline from the eaves. The house shudders and we fall
back in time to candles and stories by heart and reading news from memory.
...
7
You’d call it a blessing if you hadn’t been woken four times
by minor deities, pyjamaed like children
and frantic in the dark with oracles.
Why do our children not know how to sleep?
Do they fear we’ve left our waking late? At first light they dawn
and have you rise and lead them out into the story
8
The river has told the grass again, a parable the day has forgotten by nine.
And by ten, at your desk, you’ve forgotten it, too.
A man so easily distracted
by himself. But what are you here for
and what do they love, if not the way you leave each day to change the world’s mind
and return with the night, your fire spent, your face lined with secrets?
...
21
But, listen: no one reads poems to learn how to vote. Verse can’t change
the future’s mind. You write it like rain;
you enter it like nightfall.
It isn’t for anything; a poem is country,
and it needs you to keep walking it, and I walk out into it now, carrying my friend
and smelling the paddocky wind and feeling the rain cold on my face.
I'm so thankful for these summer days to slow down, read, think complete thoughts, and maybe, eventually, if I can slow down enough, write something "like rain."
Carol is hosting the roundup here today.
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