Posted tagged ‘draft poem’

National Poetry Month – Day 9 – “Self-Contained”

April 9, 2011

Extremely tired this 9th day of April, National Poetry Month.  I went to an opera today, an opera!  Where Juan Diego Flores cavorted about first as fake Holy Man, than as fake nun, all the time acting out a terrible womanizer, the Compte Ory, who manages, none the less, to be tremendously engaging.

Here is a poem draft for the day:

Self-Contained

My husband suggests that I write about bowls,
I like bowls, but they feel very soulless to
me, not poem fodder.

Though, actually,
I saw a bowl today,
Japanese, ceramic,
that  had a poem etched
calligraphically
on its sides.  Talk about poetic.

But, I quickly object, the poem was on the sides
of the bowl, not about it.

Don’t
be such a sophist, I tell myself,
which in turn brings up
the amphore, a sort of bowl that is extremely poetical,
the myths of Homer painted on its sides.
You just can’t argue
with Homer.

And wasn’t there also something about plums and
William Carlos Williams? He’s
a poet.

Okay, so maybe bowls weren’t
mentioned, there had to be one smewhere,
right?   Something to serve as vessel
for those plums, myths, poems.

Sure.

National Poetry Month – Day 5 – “Far”

April 5, 2011

Here’s a kind of sad draft poem.  I am very uncertain of the title, and the poem itself, especially the last lines.   I had a few alternatives, but they seemed susceptible to misconstruction, so went with this.

Far

We pushed from cold night into a Chinese restaurant.
The oldest couple in my group had, some time before,
lost their adult child.  It had been sudden, she
had been young.
The restaurant was over-bright, the fluorescent lights
reverberating like the din; one waitress wiped down the
table, another balanced a rounded pot of tea and a fist’s stack
of cups, the pot so full that tea brimmed to the edge of its
long neck, then was swallowed again, a
lithe shining tongue, each time she placed
a cup, which, like an egg shell,
seemed to pocket a translucency of
rice or seed pearls.
It was hard to look at the couple,
who had lost their child, every expression–their patience
with the waitresses, their concern about the crowd–was there space?
Were there chairs?–a barely translucent mask over ragged
loss, their faces like the extremity
of an icon, the bronze saint in a temple, church, whose foot has been rubbed
to a bare smooth grip, like a slip of soap, by petitioners who have
prayed to be washed clean, not of sin, but suffering.

The teapot begged to be poured in great gulps; the waitress ran it
over the cups.  I could almost not look
at the couple, as if their pain
might brim over too, burn me just by sight,
and yet I also wanted to shift my seat,
make room, drink with them that
fresh, hot tea, hold tight
those faces that
seemed so far,
in that fluorescence,
from anything that felt like succor.

 

 

Post-Script – on rereading poem today (April 7), am sorry that the line breaks are kind of messed up–especially through the center.  Also wonder whether last lines should be:

those faces that seemed
so unapproachable
in that flourescence
by anything that seemed
like succor.

 

I don’t know.  “Unapproachable” kind of a mouthful.  Any suggestions are welcome!

National Poetry Month- Day 4 – “Epiphany” (With elephant)

April 4, 2011

Curing Most Ills

National Poetry Month- Draft 4

Epiphany

I would really like to have an epiphany
that doesn’t involve the realization
that death happens.
Why can’t my great enlightenment
alert me to the fact that
chocolate happens?
That peppermint explodes in the mouth?
That a hot bath will cure most ills?
That eggs are unblinking
(until the yolks crack)?
And that the love that always forgives, that is,
the love you give to me,
does not come, like death,
to all, but
like the purest epiphany
wakes just one person
at a time.  Thank God, this go-round,
it’s me.

All rights reserved.  Suggestions welcome.  (It’s a draft!)

Third Day of National Poetry Month – “Sparrow Dreams”

April 3, 2011

Draft poem in honor of April, National Poetry Month.

Sparrow Dreams

I dreamt, years ago, that my infant child was a sparrow.
My husband, just last night, dreamt of a huge pooled grill
upon which customers threw raw steaks.
He also dreams of flying.

I rarely remember my dreams now–I don’t know if I can’t
hold onto them, or if I just don’t have them.  But I
dreamt, years ago, that I cupped the small brown bird,
who was my child,
inside my palms.

My husband dreams always, exciting scenarios.  Khaddafi makes
a house call; my husband disarms him while
lecturing on the merits of Debussy.

My mother once led, with great difficulty, a horse
down long dark stairs
only to find at the sweaty stoop
a sign that read, “Elevator For Horses
Only.”  Close to ninety, she still tells
that dream, but the words sometimes change:
“Horses Shouldn’t Take Stairs.”
My husband likes to tell his when he first wakes;
the surface of his sleep-furred eyes glisten
with the fantastical.


I sat holding my softly-feathered child on a bench
of women before sculptured green.  It was
Rockefeller Center, I remember, and that suddenly
I seemed to have put her down, my sparrow child, then
weeping, could not find her.

It was before her birth–when you are pregnant,
you have many dreams–but I knew, when I woke,
that my life was forever different,
that I had been given a fragile, marvelous, chance, a chance
I could not grip tightly (even though it might take flight),
but that I could not bear to lose, not ever.

As always, all rights reserved.

And also, as always, please feel free to let me know comments or suggestions.  This is a draft, and it would be wonderful to have guidance as to how to improve it.

April Poetry Month – “What is it” (Thinking of Japan)

April 1, 2011

Last year, during National Poetry Month, I posted, more or less, a new draft poem each day.  I really wasn’t sure I was up for that this year, but this morning, the scent of April called up some urge, and so I wrote the draft poem below.

It is a wonderful thing to have an incentive to think about and write poetry.  I don’t know if I can keep it up for the whole month, but I urge you all to consider trying it (at least for a few days!)   The poems I will post will, by and large, be drafts so please feel free to write comments and suggestions.

What is it

What is it that allows
the deeply suffering to feel
gratitude, that permits
the young man in Japan
on finding, after weeks, the remains of
his mother and sister, now delicately swaddled
in muddy blankets, to say
“I am so happy.”
Like the curve of breast or
hip that rises gently above
bone, softening the contours of a body evolved
to stand up on two legs, like swallowing
and swallowing again, and the relief in that,
to the caught, parched throat.

As always, all rights reserved.  As always, comment!  Suggest!  And, if you like the work, please please please check out my poetry book, Going on Somewhere, poems by Karin Gustafson, illustrations by Diana Barco, and cover by Jason Martin on Amazon.

Turtle Dreams (Draft)

December 14, 2010

Turtle On Head

We began the swamp on foot.
This was a bad idea,
a turtle suddenly on my head,
a large one, I dreamed, a snapper.
I could just make out the
creased unwrinkling of one short khaki leg
as it dangled down my brow like
an ancient bang; its mottled shell,
a dangerous helmet.
You somehow got a boat, turned to my aid.
“Don’t use the oar,” I pleaded,
as you hoisted the long, smoothed wood,
but I could see aim in your eyes.
shut mine.

(This is today’s draft.  Any suggestions?  Especially at beginning or end, let me know.)

Self-Appointed Tasks (Draft Poem)

December 13, 2010

Self-appointed Tasks

Invent duties in order to feel dutiful.
Propose purposes.
Appoint tasks.
Why? you ask.
To crowd out the required,
that, we are mired in,
what makes us cry uncle
but from which we can’t bunk off.
Cast them onto a list
where they can almost be forgotten
till ticked off,
one being to die,
another, surely, to live.

Yard Work – Colbert In Congress – Draft poem

September 27, 2010

Yard Work is Hard Work

Stephen Colbert, amazingly, made an appearance before the House Judiciary Committee Subcomittee on Immigration last Friday, testifying on issues related to illegal migrant farmworkers in the U.S.  Colbert’s alleged expertise on the issue arose from one day spent with migrant laborers in which he learned that farm work is “hard.”

Colbert’s testimony is fascinating on many levels; a few that especially struck me:  (i) his chutzpah in appearing at all (to highlight the issue with his celebrated bump);  (ii)  his chutzpah in maintaining the Colbert “persona” (the narcissistic, jingoistiic, know-it-all, conservative talk-show host) throughout the testimony, even when it did not seem much appreciated by his audience; and (iii)  his chutzpah in making an oddly sincere and thoughtful contribution to the debate.  It’s all pretty crazy; the aftermath too.

In the meantime, I had an independent, and far more pampered, experience of agricultural “work” this weekend.  (I hesitate to make the comparison to either Colbert or migrant farm workers–my experience was as much in the nature of exercise as work and completely voluntary.)  But, it gave rise to a draft poem.  (Note that the competitiveness at stake is not with Stephen Colbert.)

Raker’s Progress

Yard work is hard work;
raking makes for aching
even for the frequent
grass-comber, but for the grandiloquent,
hell-bent on proving that she
can too do it, that she can more
than do it, certainly
as well as he,
it makes for a sore
next day.

Missing New York Storm Draft Sonnet (From Florida)

September 17, 2010

Windswept, wind-littered

Missing New York Storm (September 16th) Sonnet  (From Florida)

September storm in New York hustles through
in one or two, at most a scant fifteen,
New York minutes, and I, the professed New
Yorker, wasn’t in it; I who would have been
proud to complain of the urban canyon wind,
to bemoan felled branches, the wild thwacking
of the flag outside my building, send
this poem from a far place lacking
in tall, grey, and even, it feels to me, speed,
where everyone seems required to beam
in public, but some with stern primness (no need
to bring up politics)–I miss my home!–
its nitty-gritty, windswept, wind-littered, stone.

(Karin Gustafson – suggestions welcome.)

Memorial Day Weekend- Liquified Whitman

May 30, 2010

Memorial Day Weekend

Here is a draft poem for Memorial Day weekend.  Did you know that Vitamin B is recommended to ward off bug bites?  Apparently, mosquitoes hate the smell.

On the Grass By the Pond

My Vitamin B-infused pee
blends with the blades of yellow-green
below my thighs, like
liquefied Whitman.
Memorial Day Weekend.
First outdoor pee of the season.