Posted tagged ‘ManicDDaily poem’

10th Day of National Poetry Month – Draft of the Day – Who Would Be Thin

April 10, 2010

Who Would Be Thin

As those following this blog know, I am honoring National Poetry Month by writing (sort of) a draft poem a day.   The aim is not only to get myself to write some poems, but to get you writing them too.

In that spirit, it may be useful to discuss some of what gives rise to each draft.  Yesterday’s “Good News/Bad News” actually came from the suggested topic of “killer frost”,  which is what the Hudson Valley appeared to be facing last night due to the sudden drop in temperature after an  incredibly warm week.   I ended up finding “killer frost” a bit too depressing to write about, but it did set in motion the idea of “good news/bad news.”

I’m not quite sure of what the “inspiration” for today’s draft is;  maybe it came out of a sense of deprivation this morning that it was Saturday,  I was on my own, sore-eyed, with a great many chores to do;  this somehow brought up the idea of  thinness , though the poem went in a somewhat different direction.  Please keep in mind–it’s a draft!  Any suggestions for this one, or any of them, are greatly appreciated.

Those Who Would Be Thin

There are those who want to be thin.
We’ve seen their breath-filled
cheeks jog along a walk, their knees a seeming
abundance in straight legs, their forearms softly downed
like some human thistle.
Magician and assistant alike, they saw
their bodies in half, seem to make vanish
tidbits with sleight of mouth
or wrist or palm, seem to.
Magician and dove at once, they crave
a flight that will lift them from the thick wooden
planks of the daily, the deep velvet droop of curtain
to their sides, the darkly spot lit stage,
into a blue-veined streak of sky,
the haven of the spare, where they can be
both coveted and bypass notice at once,
translucence made flesh, opalescence made bone,
where light alone is swallowed
like a sword.



9th Day of National Poetry Month – Good News, Bad News

April 9, 2010

Good News/Bad News

Good News/Bad News

And then there was the children’s book
about the man–look!–who fell out of
a plane. That was the bad news.
But, phew! he fell onto a hay stack;
this was, apparently, the good news:
that his back was not broken
through the intervention of
dried grass. But hey! there was
a needle in that stack–
which was the bad news.  Except that, wait!
He turned out to have a spare camel
in his pocket which fit exactly through the eye
of that needle–which was the good news!
for it took him straight to, do-not-pass-go to,
the kingdom of heaven, not
so much because he was a rich man
but because the hay stack hadn’t worked that well,
after all, not against a fall from the sky.

Fourth Day of National Poetry Month – Easter Poem

April 4, 2010

Here’s today’s poem draft, an Easter Poem.   The drawing done during Easter sermon on the Church program;  I hope it’s not impolite, but it helps me to listen.  (Also I  hope some of you guys are also trying some daily poems so that I don’t feel like I’m the only one being silly. )

After Easter Service with Music By Tomas Luis de Victoria, Francisco Guerrerro

One miracle of Easter
is that a stone can actually
be rolled away.  No Sisyphus in
Golgotha;  no Calvaric wheel
of samsara, resurrection not
rebirth so much as return.  (Christ,
unlike the Dali Lama,
was not even asked to pick out
the wire-rimmed glasses of
the prior him.)
But why don’t they recognize him?
Mary Magdalen takes him
for a gardener; at Emmaus, he’s
the only  stranger in Jerusalem.
Though I’m not sure of  what I recognize either
except that when clear single voices chime
together in a Renaissance motet
the soul exists for some while, and any stones
in the heart become simply the stuff that
earth is made of.