10 November 2013


Trees
To be a giant and keep quiet about it,
to stay in one's own place;
to stand for the constant presence of process
and to always seem the same;
to be steady as a rock and always trembling,
having the hard appearance of death
with the soft fluent nature of growth,
One's Being deceptively armored,
One's Becoming deceptively vulnerable;
To be so tough, and to take the light so well,
Freely providing forbidden knowledge
Of so many things of heaven and earth
For which we should otherwise have no word -----

Poems or people are rarely so lovely,
And even when they have great qualities
They tend to tell you rather than exemplify
What they believe themselves to be about,
While from the moving silence of trees,
Whether in storm or calm, in leaf and naked,
Night and day, we draw conclusions of our own,
Sustaining and unnoticed as our breath
And perilous also--though there has never been
A critical tree---about the nature of things.

Howard Nemerov

09 November 2013

Twigs (excerpt)

Neither music,
fame, nor wealth,
not even poetry itself,
could provide consolation
for life’s brevity,
or the fact that King Lear
is a mere eighty pages long and comes to an end…
And so
it has taken me
all of sixty years
to understand
that water is the finest drink,
and bread the most delicious food,
and that art is worthless
unless it plants
a measure of splendor in people’s hearts.
–Taha Muhammad Ali (From So What:  New and Selected Poems, translated by Peter Cole, Yahya Hijazi, and Gabriel Levin)