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Sunday, September 4, 2022

Poems for October 12 (Poet Laureates)

 Maxine Kumin (NPC 1981-2 https://www.britannica.com/biography/Maxine-Kumin

Anthony Hecht (NPC 1982-84) https://www.britannica.com/biography/Anthony-Hecht

Robert Fitzgerald (NPC 1984-5, limited due to health) https://www.britannica.com/biography/Robert-Fitzgerald

Whittemore, second term: 1984-

Gwendolyn Brooks (NPC 1985-6)https://www.britannica.com/biography/Gwendolyn-Brooks

National Poetry consultant now National Poet Laureate:  1986 (Robert Penn Warren-- see Sept. 7; NPC 1944)

Richard Wilbur  (NPL 1987-8) https://www.britannica.com/biography/Richard-Wilbur

Nemerov, second term as NPL (1963) for two terms 1988-90) 

Mark Strand (NPL 1990-91) https://www.britannica.com/biography/Mark-Strand

 

Almost Spring, Driving Home, Reciting Hopkins  by Maxine Kumin

 

"A devout but highly imaginative Jesuit,"

Untermeyer says in my yellowed

college omnibus of modern poets,

perhaps intending an oxymoron, but is it?

Shook foil, sharp rivers start to flow.

Landscape plotted and pieced, gray-blue, snow-pocked

begins to show its margins. Speeding back

down the interstate into my own hills

I see them fickle, freckled, mounded fully

and softened by millennia into pillows.

The priest's sprung metronome tick-tocks,

repeating how old winter is. It asks

each mile, snow fog battening the valleys,

what is all this juice and all this joy?

 

for more poems: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/maxine-w-kumin

 

Death Sauntering About by Anthony Hecht

 

The crowds have gathered here by the paddock gates

And racing silks like the flags of foreign states

Billow and snap in the sun,

And thoroughbreds prance and paw the turf, the race

Is hotly contested, for win and show and place,

Before it has yet begun.

The ladies' gowns in corals and mauves and reds,

Like fluently-changing variegated beds

Of a wild informal garden,

Float hither and yon where gentlemen advance

Questions of form, the inscrutable ways of chance,

As edges of shadow harden.

Among these holiday throngs, a passer-by,

Mute, unremarked, insouciant, saunter I,

One who has placed

Despite the tumult, the pounding of hooves, the

sweat,

And the urgent importance of everybody's bet-

No premium on haste.

more poems: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/anthony-hecht - tab-poems

 

Lightness in Autumn by Robert Fitzgerald

 

The rake is like a wand or fan,   

With bamboo springing in a span   

To catch the leaves that I amass   

In bushels on the evening grass.

 

I reckon how the wind behaves   

And rake them lightly into waves   

And rake the waves upon a pile,   

Then stop my raking for a while.

 

The sun is down, the air is blue,   

And soon the fingers will be, too,   

But there are children to appease   

With ducking in those leafy seas.

 

So loudly rummaging their bed

On the dry billows of the dead,

They are not warned at four and three   

Of natural mortality.

 

Before their supper they require   

A dragon field of yellow fire

To light and toast them in the gloom.   

So much for old earth’s ashen doom.

 

more poems: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/robert-fitzgerald - tab-poems

 

An Aspect of Love, Alive in the Ice and Fire

by Gwendolyn Brooks

                                                                                 LaBohem Brown

 

In a package of minutes there is this We.

How beautiful.

Merry foreigners in our morning,

we laugh, we touch each other, 

are responsible props and posts.

 

A physical light is in the room.

 

Because the world is at the window

we cannot wonder very long.

 

You rise. Although

genial, you are in yourself again.

I observe

your direct and respectable stride.

You are direct and self-accepting as a lion

in Afrikan velvet. You are level, lean,

remote.

 

There is a moment in Camaraderie

when interruption is not to be understood.

I cannot bear an interruption.

This is the shining joy;

the time of not-to-end.

 

On the street we smile.

We go

in different directions

down the imperturbable street.

 

from Blacks, 1987

 

More poems: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/gwendolyn-brooks

 

The Beautiful Changes by Richard Wilbur

 

One wading a Fall meadow finds on all sides   

The Queen Anne’s Lace lying like lilies

On water; it glides

So from the walker, it turns

Dry grass to a lake, as the slightest shade of you   

Valleys my mind in fabulous blue Lucernes.

 

The beautiful changes as a forest is changed   

By a chameleon’s tuning his skin to it;   

As a mantis, arranged

On a green leaf, grows

Into it, makes the leaf leafier, and proves   

Any greenness is deeper than anyone knows.

 

Your hands hold roses always in a way that says   

They are not only yours; the beautiful changes   

In such kind ways,   

Wishing ever to sunder

Things and things’ selves for a second finding, to lose   

For a moment all that it touches back to wonder.

 

for more poems: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/richard-wilbur - tab-poems

 

 

Coming to This  by Mark Strand

 

We have done what we wanted.

We have discarded dreams, preferring the heavy industry   

of each other, and we have welcomed grief

and called ruin the impossible habit to break.

 

And now we are here.

The dinner is ready and we cannot eat.   

The meat sits in the white lake of its dish.   

The wine waits.

 

Coming to this

has its rewards: nothing is promised, nothing is taken away.   

We have no heart or saving grace,

no place to go, no reason to remain.

 

Keeping Things Whole  by Mark Strand

 

In a field

I am the absence

of field.

This is

always the case.

Wherever I am

I am what is missing.

 

When I walk

I part the air

and always

the air moves in   

to fill the spaces

where my body’s been.

 

We all have reasons

for moving.

I move

to keep things whole.

 

for more poems: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/mark-strand - tab-poems

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