Friday, April 11, 2014

National Poetry Month: Grown-up

                                                  Was it for this I uttered prayers
                                                  And sobbed and cursed and kicked the stairs
                                                  That now, domestic as a plate,
                                                  I should retire at half past eight?
                                        -Edna St. Vincent Millay

Thursday, April 10, 2014

On the Non-Necessity of Originality in Art

Not every performance needs to be new and different.  Not every poem needs to say something new.  It is perfectly acceptable to be the 17 millionth person to write a haiku about cherry blossoms, as long as what is said is still beautiful.

This is not to say that new things are not beautiful and worthy of being said, but one would be better served by yet another cherry blossom poem than novelty which has no merit other than novelty.

Poetry Month: Cherry Blossoms

Kannon's tiled temple  
roof floats far away in clouds  
of cherry blossoms  

~Basho

Storming over
Lake Nio, Whirlwinds 
of cherry blossoms.
~Basho

The leafless cherry,
Old as a toothless woman,
Blooms in flowers,
Mindful of its youth.

~Basho

What a strange thing!
to be alive
beneath cherry blossoms.

~Issa


Drinking up the clouds,
It spews out cherry blossoms -
Yoshino Mountain.

~Buson

shining on the sea...
dazzling sunlight shaking over
hills of cherry-bloom

~Buson

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Poetry Month:Wishing

I wish I could be 
Kannon of the thousand heads
To kiss you and Kannon
Of the thousand arms
To embrace you, and
Dainichi to hold you
Forever. 

~Marichiko

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

National Poetry Month: Skater of Ghost Lake


Ghost Lake's a dark lake, a deep lake and cold:
Ice black as ebony, frostily scrolled;

Far in its shadows a faint sound whirrs;
Steep stand the sentineled deep, dark firs.



A brisk sound, a swift sound, a ring-tinkle-ring;

Flit-flit--a shadow, with a stoop and a swing,
Flies from the shadow through the crackling cold.
Ghost Lake's a dark lake, a deep lake and old!



Leaning and leaning, with a stride and a stride,

Hands locked behind him, scarf blowing wide,
Jeremy Randall skates, skates late,
Star for a candle, moon for a mate.



Black is the clear glass now that he glides,

Crisp is thaw whisper of long lean strides,
Swift is his swaying--but pricked ears hark.
None come to Ghost Lake late after dark!



Cecily only--yes, it is she!

Stealing to Ghost Lake, tree after tree,
Kneeling in snow by the still lake side,
Rising with feet winged, gleaming, to glide.



Dust of the ice swirls. Here is his hand.

Brilliant his eyes burn. Now, as was planned,
Arm across arm twined, laced to his side,
Out on the dark lake lightly they glide.



Dance of the dim moon, a rhythmical reel,

A swaying, a swift tune--skurr of the steel;
Moon for a candle, maid for a mate,
Jeremy Randall skates, skates late.



Black as if lacquered the wide lake lies;

Breath is a frost-fume, eyes seek eyes;
Souls are a sword-edge tasting the cold.
Ghost Lake's a dark lake, a deep lake and old!



Far in the shadows hear faintly begin

Like a string pluck-plucked of a violin,
Muffled in the mist on the lake's far bound,
Swifter and swifter, a low singing sound!



Far in the shadows and faint on the verge

Of blue cloudy moonlight, see it emerge,
Flit-flit--a phantom, with a stoop and a swing...
Ah, it's a night bird, burdened of wing!



Pressed close to Jeremy, laced to his side,

Cecily Culver, dizzy you glide.
Jeremy Randall sweepingly veers
Out on the dark ice far from the piers.



"Jeremy!" "Sweetheart?" "What do you fear?"

"Nothing, my darling--nothing is here!"
"Jeremy?" "Sweetheart?" "What do you flee?"
"Something--I know not; something I see!"



Swayed to a swift stride, brisker of pace,

Leaning and leaning, they race and they race;
Ever that whirring, that crisp sound thin
Like a string pluck-plucked of a violin;



Ever that swifter and low singing sound

Sweeping behind them, winding them round;
Gasp of their breath now that chill flakes fret:
Ice black as ebony--blacker--like jet!



Ice shooting fangs forth--sudden like spears;

Crackling of lightning--a roar in their ears!
Shadowy, a phantom swerves off from its prey...
No, it's a night bird flit-flits away!



Low-winging moth-owl, home to your sleep!

Ghost Lake's a still lake, a cold lake and deep.
Faint in its shadows a far sound whirrs.
Black stand the ranks of its sentinel firs.

~William Rose Benét

Monday, April 7, 2014

Books I Must Read, and that Right Soon

T. Rex and the Crater of DOOM! 



National Poetry Month: That Moon

A wine bottle fell from a wagon
And broke open in a field.
That night one hundred beetles and all their cousins
Gathered.
And did some serious binge drinking.
They even found some seed husks nearby
And began to play them like drums and whirl.
This made God very happy.
Then the night candle rose into the sky
And one drunk creature, laying down his instrument,
Said to his friend--for no apparent
Reason.
"What should we do about that moon?"
Seems to Hafiz
Most everyone has laid aside the music
Tackling such profoundly useless
Questions. 

~Hafiz, trans. Daniel Ladinsky