Posts Tagged ‘NC Poets’
Old & New
Posted in Imagery, Photography, poetry, tagged A. R. Ammons, Bill Griffin, Bosh and Flapdoodle, nature photography, NC Poets, New Year, poetry on January 5, 2024| 12 Comments »
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[with 3 poems by A. R. Ammons]
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Quibbling the Colossal
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I just had the funniest thought: it’s the
singing of Wales and whales that I like so
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much: you know, have you heard those men’s
groups, those coal miners and church people in
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Wales singing: to be deeply and sweetly undone,
listen in: and the scrawny rising and
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screechings and deep bellowings of whales,
their arias personal (?) and predatory at
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love and prey – that makes up mind for us as
we study to make out mind in them: the reason
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I can’t attain world view or associational
complexity is that when I read I’m asleep by
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the second paragraph: also, my poems come in
dislocated increments, because my spine between
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the shoulderblades gets to hurting when I type:
also my feet swell from sitting still: but
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when the world tilts one way it rights another
which is to say that the disjunctiveness of my
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recent verse cracks up the dark cloud and
covering shield of influence and lets fresh
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light in, more than what little was left, a
sliver along the farthest horizon: room to
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breathe and stretch and not give a shit, room
to turn my armies of words around in or camp
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out and hide (bivouac): height to reach up
through the smoke and busted mirrors to clear
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views of the beginnings high in the oldest
times: but seriously you know, this way of
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seeing things is just a way of seeing things:
time is not crept up on by some accumulative
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designer but percolates afresh every day like
a hot cup of coffee: and Harold, if this is
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an Evening Land, when within memory was it
otherwise, all of civilized time a second in
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the all of time: good lord, we’re all so
recent, we’ve hardly got our ears scrubbed,
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hair unmatted, our teeth root-canaled: so,
shine on, shine on, harvest moon: the computers
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are clicking, and the greatest dawn ever is
rosy in the skies.
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++++++++++ CAST THE OVERCAST
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A. R. Ammons
from Bosh and Flapdoodle, W. W. Norton & Company, New York, NY; © 2005
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January 1: The big round thermometer on the back porch reads 35 degrees Fahrenheit. A long thin coiled spring of two facing layers: each face different metals which contract differently when cooled: the spring’s central attachment a little axle free to rotate: on the axle a needle, a pointer that is able to inscribe an arc three-quarters of a circle: -40 to 140 degrees, currently 35. In 2024 when we can simply inquire of our phone, are we really meant to believe this dubious mechanical contraption?
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My ear lobes, the back of my neck, and my nose hairs believe it. I zip up, pull my cap lower, and walk down the hill toward the river. Jason has pulled in and unlocked the gate. Soon more layered and downed figures arrive. Here we go, twenty-five of us, on our First Day Hike along this newest little section of the Mountains-to-Sea Trail beside the Yadkin River in Surry County.
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First Day Hikes have sprung up all over, parks and neighborhoods, greenways and rail trails. About half of this morning’s walkers have never before attended an Elkin Valley Trails Association event. Something new to show this old muddy river. Fresh coyote tracks on a sandy bank. In a rotting stump, a big square pileated woodpecker hole that wasn’t here 3 days ago when Jason scouted. Still-moist chips at the base of a girdled tree and bright incisor marks from the beaver.
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Now we’re crossing a meadow with waving heads of last summer’s asters, dry and higher than our own heads. I’m pulling goldenrod and wingstem seeds to sow on newly bare ground around the new crossing over Dutchman Creek. Dee remarks on the beauty of particular airy feathered fronds – dog fennel, no summer eye-catcher but striking in its winter browns and grays.
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Old? New? Or just a continuous flow of moments like these? I’ll turn away from my mirror. I won’t query my knees. I’ll unzip my jacket, because now we’re moving and I’m plenty warm. I’ll enjoy a big inhale of the river-moist air. I’ll listen to the chatter of hikers and the whistle of white-throated sparrows. I’ll make myself ready to notice the next new thing before us.
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Hooliganism
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Once (there was a time when) I was attracted
to, if not attractive to, everybody, starlet
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and streetlet, athlete and bellybag: afire,
I burned anything, including myself: kneedeep
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in ashen brush, even some simmering fagots, I
tried to separate the heat from the flame but
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gave up, pouring it all into the love of a wife
now nearly half a century old – the wife a
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little older: most of those old flames (sweet
people) have flickered away except for the
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corner of my mind where lively they live on in
honor, honorary doctorates circling their
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laureled heads – what schools they founded!
taking what pains, with what tears, they taught
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me how, roaring possibilities and tenderest
glows: love, love, one learns to love, it is
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not easy, yet not to love, even astray, leaves
something left for the grave: burnt out
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completely is ease at last, the trunk honeyed
full as a fall hive: when the light dies out
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at last on the darkening coals, the life
turns to jewels, so expensive, and
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they never give the sparkle up: this was
a fancy, and not half fancy enough and somewhat
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lacking in detail but ever true.
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A. R. Ammons
from Bosh and Flapdoodle, W. W. Norton & Company, New York, NY; © 2005
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My friend Anne gave me Bosh and Flapdoodle. A. R. “Archie” Ammons wrote the collection of poems in 1996, five years before his death, and his son and friends had it published in 2005, all of the poems, as they say, “exactly as Ammons wrote them.” I am always surprised by Ammons. Throughout his life as a writer he demonstrates that poetry is everywhere, and everything. There is nothing mundane or unworthy of being noticed. That itself can be surprising, especially if you have the idea that poetry exists on some elevated plane, but I’m also often taken off guard, like a snow ball to the face, by his sudden deep connections that reveal the reality of our existence.
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from Mouvance
. . . so if you are to get any passion out
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of life, you’ll have to dig it out of narrow
spaces or squeeze all you have into slender,
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if deep, circumstance: I myself have never
known what to do about anything: as I look
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back, I see not even a clown but a clown’s
clothes flapping on the clothesline of some
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tizzy: . . .
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A. R. Ammons and Fred Chappell have been my enduring poetic inspirations. They are alike in that their poetry can be complex and difficult, but they both always return to the earthy assurance of our humanity. Perhaps because they both grew up in rural North Carolina, Archie in the sandhills and Fred in the mountains? This book, more than most any Ammons collection I’ve read, is personal and intimate, and of course as always irreverent, but even more than usually hilarious. He demolishes any grand notion of his greatness (he, one of the greatest 20th century American poets). He crushes any sentimentality about aging or his own approaching death. He invites, I guess he requires, his reader to just look around and really look within and stop for a minute to think about what’s going down. Yeah, it’s bosh and flapdoodle. Yeah, it’s life.
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More about Archibald Randolf Ammons HERE
Purchase Bosh and Flapdoodle from Bookshop.org HERE
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Way Down Upon the Woodsy Roads
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Don’t you think poetry should be succinct:
not now: I think it should be discinct: it
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should wander off and lose its way back and
then bump into a sign and have to walk home:
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who gives a hoot about those big-Mack trucks
of COMPRESSION: what are the most words for
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the least: take your cute little compact and
don’t tell me anything about it: just turn me
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loose, let me rattle my ole prattle: poetry
springs greatest from deepest depths: well,
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let her whistle: how shallow can anything
get: (rhyming on the front end): I do not
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believe that setting words to rhyme and meter
turns prose into poetry, and having written
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some of the shortest poems, I now like to
write around largely into any precinct (not
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succinct) or pavilion (a favorite word) I fall
in with: I have done my duty: I am a happy
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man: I am at large: life sho is show biz:
make room for the great presence of nothing:
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do you never long to wander off: from the
concentrations: for it is one thing to fail
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of them and another never to have intended
them: the love nest, men becomes a solid
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little (mortgaged) colonial: duty become your
chief commendation: the animal in you, older
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than your kind, longs to undertake the heavy
freedom of going off by himself into the wide
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periphery of chance and surprise, pleasure or
terror: oh, come with me, or go off like me,
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if only in the deep travels of your soul, and
let your howl hold itself in through all the
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forests of the night: it’s the shortest day:
the sun is just now setting behind the branch
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of the crabapple tree it always sets behind
this day of the year. . . .
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++++++++++ DRAB POT
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A. R. Ammons
from Bosh and Flapdoodle, W. W. Norton & Company, New York, NY; © 2005
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Speaking in Tongues
Posted in Imagery, music, Photography, poetry, tagged As If She Spoke in Tongues, Bill Griffin, Kim Hayes, nature photography, NC Poets, poetry, Southern writing on December 15, 2023| 11 Comments »
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[with 4 poems by Kim Hayes]
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Winter Wind and Chimes
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All this winter, the wind has moaned,
its deep modal harmonies
rolling up the valley’s throat
like a procession of monks, chanting.
And at the darkened door,
they strike the chimes –
cowled visitors
shifting restlessly, foot to foot,
on the icy steps.
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All this winter, like metronomes,
two ghostly porch chairs
have, in unison, rocked a rhythm
for strange sulfurous chords;
invented, frenzied arpeggios;
or just one strident not repeated,
brassy as a storefront bell –
wind and chimes tangled in
an endless ensemble.
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All this winter, she has listened,
even going out once to tie a string
around one pitchless chime,
hoping to set it better in tune.
But the wind worried loose the knot
and snatched it off.
Come spring, she thought,
I will take down these chimes.
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All this winter, the wind has composed
for chimes and chairs and a woman
who will, on second thought,
let the wind have its way,
leave the chimes alone
to be played by softer breezes
on a warm summer day.
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Kim Hayes
from As If She Spoke in Tongues, Grateful Steps Foundation, Asheville, NC; © 2023
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Technical challenge, that’s one of the reasons I love choral singing. Will I even be able to learn this tenor part with its oddball intervals and syncopation? Can I project a clear open tone all the way up to that G sharp, maybe the A? Can I keep balance & rhythm and avoid falling off the stage when the time signature flips from 6/8 to 2/2? Can I listen so perfectly to this alto standing next to me that our voices may create something beyond the sum of us two?
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This last challenge transcends technical. In an ensemble, the emphasis is not on the individual but the communal voice. Perhaps blend and modulation are learned skills, but the birth of art is in the give and take, the sharing, the group coming together as a single organism. What a fine metaphor for poetry. Writer and reader are not performer and audience. The poet can learn craft, devise image and simile, tinker with language and rhythm, but all the poem’s music is flat until the reader breathes it in and the lines begin to sing in her heart.
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This is the spark both music and poetry yearn to ignite: beyond technical and communal, the beauty and truth which burn into us and set us afire. Several times in this season of many rehearsals and concerts I have felt a moment’s elevation to that mysterious plateau. In a blink, the magic of notes, harmonies, lyrical language swell my heart until I can’t read the score for my tears. I couldn’t say the epiphany arises from the instruments, from the lines of verse, from the voices surrounding me – it takes life from all of these together. The music communicates its message directly to the heart.
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The choir releases its music into the air. The poet surrenders her lines to the universe. A new language is revealed. A new voice speaks from which some ear, some mind may discover some new life never before imagined. Our spirit breathes in these vaporous things and is exalted.
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The Grandmothers
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Thanksgiving morning,
before the sun, I wait
in the dark kitchen
for the gentle ghosts
of my grandmothers.
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I welcome them
as I heat the oven,
feel them gathering,
like the warm aromas
of brown sugar and
cinnamon, to watch me
as I baste and bake.
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In the drifting dust of sifted flour,
their hands guide mine:
a pinch more of this or
a little salt in the broth or
give that a stir before it sticks.
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A I set the table, they lean in,
sighing, fingers smoothing,
lingering over each fine stitch
in the embroidered
tablecloth, handed down,
daughter to daughter;
they smile as I take out
the old rose-patterned
wedding china.
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And so, they keep me company,
chat, chuckle and chide
all morning long as they
share my kitchen,
the grandmothers who,
by being who there were,
make me who I am.
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Kim Hayes
from As If She Spoke in Tongues, Grateful Steps Foundation, Asheville, NC; © 2023
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. . . as long as she kept [her words] to herself, they were one language. Her language. It was only when she gave them up, like babies for adoption, that they slipped from her grasp and became subject to interpretation. . . . No translation was the same. No understanding was universal. The language of her words unfolded into many languages, many understandings, as if she spoke in tongues.
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From the Author’s Note in As If She Spoke in Tongues by Kim Hayes, this is a mysterious and provoking expression of the potential and power of words. Innocent-sounding words spoken with heat might spark a conflagration. Words fumbling for meaning may yet reach their mark and forge strong bonds. Even we writers with the opportunity to pause and ponder, we who strive to select from all options the perfect words, can never know how they will be received. From this mystery rises poetry’s power to connect.
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The poems in Kim’s collection connect in all these mysterious ways. Her poems span generations and geographies. The speaker may be obvious and defined or intentionally obscure, thereby becoming universal. We humans are not, thank all stars, telepathic. Therefore from the writer’s images and memories we must create our own imagery and resurrect our own memories. And doesn’t this surprising connection we discover within ourselves also fire a feeling of connection to the writer?
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We cast our words into the breeze like feathered seeds and cannot know what will bloom. As in this line from Adrienne Rich, But poems are like dreams: in them you put what you don’t know you know. And these lines from Poems for Sale by Kim Hayes: a poem like a trick of the eye, / peripheral flicker – / what might or might not be, / glimpsed and gone; // I have for you today . . .
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[Order As If She Spoke in Tongues HERE ]
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Rocks and Hard Places
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Barefoot, I walk
on a dream road
paved with all your
rocks and hard places,
misery and discontent.
“I only had to bury him once,” you said.
“It’s the god-damned memories that won’t
stay in the ground.”
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Sharp-honed memories like flint shards,
chiseled by every hard place
you ever knew ( and there were plenty),
stabbing themselves upward to the surface,
resurrected and designed to cut deep.
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My feet are bleeding now.
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But tonight, I still plan to dance
with your unearthed undead,
twirling on yet another hard place,
by bloody footprints leaving
gritty, blushing rosettes,
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while you wait somewhere in the dark,
another rock in your hand.
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Kim Hayes
from As If She Spoke in Tongues, Grateful Steps Foundation, Asheville, NC; © 2023
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My Heart of Stone
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Running a thumb over
the worn and rounded edges
of this cold, found rock,
I try to think
of strength.
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This worry stone,
gemstone,
whetstone,
pocked and veined
with sparks
of fool’s gold, cools
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as I hold it,
no heart to part
with it today, although
I have often thought of
giving it away, until
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feeling the pull of it,
charged, magnetic,
I always come home,
press my heart of stone
into the warm palm of
your open hand.
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Kim Hayes
from As If She Spoke in Tongues, Grateful Steps Foundation, Asheville, NC; © 2023
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What Is Required
Posted in Imagery, poetry, tagged Bill Griffin, Bob Wickless, imagery, nature, nature photography, NC Poets, poetry, The Orchard Street Press, The Secret Care the World Takes, winter on December 8, 2023| 4 Comments »
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[with 3 poems by Bob Wickless]
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Not Wind, Not Water
+++++ In Memory of Rod Jellema
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I would study, if I could, not wind
Nor water, but the silence after wind,
The scattering after second motion
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On a darkened shore. Tests, if given,
Would consist of laying pages
End to end, the opening of endless
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Information, movements on the beach
At dawn. Neither light nor darkness overall,
But the space of intersection . . .
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The X between the film and camera
Where easy motion crosses over
One to the world. There I’d sit,
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X’ed out, oblivious, yet hugely intelligent.
Schools of fish would soon dismiss me,
Flotsam would pass, failures survive,
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But I, jetsam, drunk beyond knowledge,
Would float aimless, issuing assignments,
Collecting homework from the stars.
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Bob Wickless
from The Secret Care the World Takes, The Orchard Street Press, Gates Mills, OH, © 2023
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Not much to see here this time of year? But that’s exactly why we’ve come. While Linda and Margaret chase Bert down the wide camellia-lined promenades of the university garden, Josh and I take an inconspicuous side path. Not many folks meandering these narrow trails today. Winter-brown, bloomed-out, leaf-strewn: welcome to Native Plants.
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Meadow, borders, understory, they draw us right in. Just a month ago these pale bristles, fuzzballs, and tufts were brightly hued racemes, cymes, and corymbs. So inviting. Now begging for dispersal. I let my hand cup a stem and run up over the feathery head. I examine my palm – dozens of tiny seedlets, each with its stiff barbule. My, my — Josh just happens to have a sheaf of miniature brown envelopes in his shirt pocket. He hands me one and I dribble my catch into it. How many different species of goldenrod and aster? And we still have an entire little prairie to traverse.
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A month after last April’s tornado crossed our neighborhood, after the cherry picker and chainsaws had gone home, after the ‘dozer had pushed two-ton trunks and root balls to the edge of our property past the Duke Energy cut, I imagined that the bare clay and churned up leaf mold would wait for winter, barren, when I could sow the half-acre with something new. But this summer the exposed earth received something it had patiently waited decades for. Sunlight. This fall the slope is a jostling upright congregation of pilewort and poke, and knee deep in damnable invasive stilt grass.
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Best get to it. It’s a lot of square meters, but I have a fire rake and a 5-pound hazelhoe I use for trail workdays. And on the screened porch I have a bag of bags, cold stratifying, waiting for January and a smooth, raked bed: native silver plume grass, big bluestem, Indian grass my friend Joe gathered from his meadow on the Mitchell River; wingstem, crownbeard, ironweed I’ve been pulling during hikes along the MST; store-bought half-kilos of Southeast Wildflowers; and a little miniature brown envelope, stuffed full, and hand-labeled “Duke Mix.”
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Two Poems From School
1. Drawing Horses
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There was one slow girl from grade two
And three, unable to multiplicate, ill-
At-ease, and long to devise, who tried
But tired of her dull and daily work,
Turned the smudge of your yellow page off
And began to draw horses.
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Riderless, stream of those great manes back,
her horses rode out of no course but gladly off
The end of every page to the end of every class.
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And when that girl died in a white hospital
Kicked by no horse but the one deep inside
Galloping over her frail, fourth grade hide,
I though I would try drawing horses. But I,
I was no good.
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So girl, who never learned much from school
But taught me a daily grace in the movement
Of horses, these are for you.
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Bob Wickless
from The Secret Care the World Takes, The Orchard Street Press, Gates Mills, OH, © 2023
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When Bob Wickless signed my copy of The Secret Care the World Takes, he noted that while we have never met in person we share three things in common: poetry; North Carolina; the editorial generosity of Jack Kristofco at The Orchard Street Press. And a fourth thing – a year ago I featured Bob’s poem Prayer in Spring in another post extolling the wonders of native “weeds.”
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Bob is from Maryland and has “held many jobs” in his lifetime, but he wisely retired to Reidsville NC to reside in “the writingest state.” Secret Care takes seriously the creative task of reminding us of what we all share in common. Bob leads his characters by the hand, introduces them to us, places our hand in theirs and waits quietly while we gaze into each other’s eyes. That tender connection may be wistful, it may be sad, but there is also humor in these poems. Laughter. Joy.
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In the end may we become convinced that the World does care for us. Perhaps we may feel the tug to care also for the World and what it contains, what it nurtures, what it brings forth. Through the magic of poetry, this care is no longer secret.
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Check out The Orchard Street Press, its annual contest and anthology, Quiet Diamonds, and order Bob Wickless’s book HERE
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Solstice: The Children’s Ward
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The secret care the world takes
Has pressed closed all the petals
Of tiny summer flowers
As if darkness might infuse
Those dying colors
With some thing they did not mean,
Some statement thy did not possess,
Some dream they could never intend.
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It is in the same way rain,
Or even the thought of rain
Oncoming, turns up a maple’s leaves
Like fragile buckets –
Or a whole forest of maples,
A hundred, thousand, children’s hands
Raised in anticipation
Of the sky’s sweet promise.
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And it is evident, too, the easy way
You breathe, so effortlessly in sleep,
How your small, secret bodies know,
Always, exactly what is required
Of this world and the next
To simply sleep
A sleep simple enough
To trust all your flowers to love.
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Bob Wickless
from The Secret Care the World Takes, The Orchard Street Press, Gates Mills, OH, © 2023
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Glad to hear from you Jenny. May life continue to surprise . . . ---B