Sunday, May 26, 2019

Description of Spring / Henry Howard


Description of Spring, 
wherein eche thing renews, save onelie the lover

The soote season, that bud and bloom forth brings,
With green hath clad the hill and eke the vale:
The nightingale with feathers new she sings;
The turtle to her make hath told her tale.
Summer is come, for every spray now springs:  
The hart hath hung his old head on the pale;
The buck in brake his winter coat he flings;
The fishes flete with new repairèd scale.
The adder all her slough away she slings;
The swift swallow pursueth the flies smale;
The busy bee her honey now she mings;
Winter is worn that was the flowers' bale.
And thus I see among these pleasant things
Eche care decays, and yet my sorrow springs.

~~
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1517-1547)
from Tottel's Miscellany, 1870

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey biography

Saturday, May 25, 2019

Saint Augustine Blues #6 / Will Dockery

from Saint Augustine Blues 

Chorus Six

Dollars in the bucket
collect for the street singer.
Old man with beads paints a chinaberry
points out the parrots.

Blonde after blonde after blonde
after the parade.
People start looking really strange again.

I must seem likewise to them
as this dusty smell surrounds me.

I'd draw these people with words
but I'm not fast enough.
They pass and fade
part of the parade.

On this really old wall,
good view from up here.
Forever is a long time
but not as long as yesterday.

~~
Will Dockery, 1999
from Selected Poems, 1976-2019, 2019 

[All rights reserved - used with permission]

Will Dockery biography

Sunday, May 19, 2019

Expecting Inspiration / George Sulzbach


Expecting Inspiration

Watching cars and people
something I do a lot.
Sitting near the alley
trying to bum a smoke.
Those rich folks
walking by
the stories they must have.
Like I don't have one
as if I was just a still life.

A smile from one
that makes my day
and a dollar or two
even more.
I'm not looking for a hand out
I don't need you to survive
I'm not asking for a donation
I'm just looking for to be inspired.

Don't need a girl friend
or a hit off the stem
I don't need a street preacher's tears.
I need something I can make art of
some sculpture
but then again no.

Making waves on down the street
those folks are not my style.
I won't beg you for no hand outs
but I'd like it if you'd  . . .
give me a smile.

~~
George Sulzbach, 2016

[All rights reserved - used with permission]

George Sulzbach biography

George Sulzbach, "Shadowville Speedway," 2008.
All rights reserved - used with permission

Saturday, May 18, 2019

Ballade of the Poet's Thought / Charles G.D. Roberts


Ballade of the Poet's Thought

A poet was vexed with the fume of the street,
    With tumult wearied, with din distraught;
And very few of the passing feet
    Would stay to listen to truths he taught:
    And he said,— "My labor is all for naught;                                  
I will go, and at Nature’s lips drink deep."—
    For he knew not the wealth of the poet’s thought,
Though sweet to win, was bitter to keep.

So he left the hurry, and dust, and heat
    For the free, green forest where man was not;
And found in the wilderness’ deep retreat
    That favor with Nature which he sought.
    She spake with him, nor denied him aught,
In waking vision or visioned sleep,
    But little he guessed the wealth she brought,                              
Though sweet to win, was bitter to keep.

But now when his bosom, grown replete,
    Would lighten itself in song of what
It had gathered in silence, he could meet
    No answering thrill from his passion caught.                              
    Then grieving he fled from that quiet spot,
To where men work, and are weary, and weep;
    For he said,— "The wealth for which I wrought
Is sweet to win, but bitter to keep."

Envoi

Oh, poets bewailing your hapless lot,                                    
    That ye may not in Nature your whole hearts steep,
Know that the wealth of the poet’s thought
    Is sweet to win, but bitter to keep.

~~
Charles G.D. Roberts (1860-1943)
from Orion, and other poems, 1880

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada, the United States, and the European Union]

Sunday, May 12, 2019

A Song for Mother's Day / Marguerite Wilkinson


A Song for Mother's Day

Mother, you gave me sun and stars,
Great hills, and rivers undefiled,
For, when you gave me life, you gave
Love of their beauty to your child.

Without you I could not have known
The Spring that makes the valleys green,
The rustling of the wings of birds,
Or clover fragrance kind and keen.

Your travail gave me all my joys,
Laughter and talk and young delight
And dreams that float like clouds in heaven
High, high above me, shy and white.

For all these proud and lovely things
Thanks are too small a thing to give –
Mother, I thank you with my love,
Who gave me this good life to live.

~~
Marguerite Wilkinson (1883-1928)
from Bluestone: Lyrics, 1920

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada, the United States, and the European Union]

Saturday, May 11, 2019

The Spring / Abraham Cowley


The Spring

Though you be absent here, I needs must say
The Trees as beauteous are, and flowers as gay,
      As ever they were wont to be;
      Nay the Birds rural musick too
      Is as melodious and free,      
      As if they sung to pleasure you:
I saw a Rose-Bud ope this morn; I'll swear
The blushing Morning open'd not more fair.

How could it be so fair, and you away?
How could the Trees be beauteous, Flowers so gay?
      Could they remember but last year,
      How you did Them, They you delight,
      The sprouting leaves which saw you here,
      And call'd their Fellows to the sight,
Would, looking round for the same sight in vain,
Creep back into their silent Barks again.

Where e'er you walk'd trees were as reverend made,
As when of old Gods dwelt in every shade.
      Is 't possible they should not know,
      What loss of honor they sustain,
      That thus they smile and flourish now,
      And still their former pride retain ?
Dull Creatures! 'tis not without Cause that she,
Who fled the God of wit, was made a Tree.

In ancient times sure they much wiser were,
When they rejoyc'd the Thracian verse to hear;
      In vain did Nature bid them stay,
      When Orpheus had his song begun,
      They call'd their wondring roots away,
      And bad them silent to him run.
How would those learned trees have followed you?
You would have drawn Them, and their Poet too.

But who can blame them now?  for, since you're gone,
They're here the only Fair, and Shine alone.
      You did their Natural Rights invade;
      Where ever you did walk or sit,
      The thickest Boughs could make no shade,
      Although the Sun had granted it:
The fairest Flowers could please no more, neer you,
Then Painted Flowers, set next to them, could do.

When e'er then you come hither, that shall be
The time, which this to others is, to Me.
      The little joys which here are now,
      The name of Punishments do bear;
      When by their sight they let us know
      How we depriv'd of greater are.
'Tis you the best of Seasons with you bring;
This is for Beasts, and that for Men the Spring.

~~
Abraham Cowley (1618-1667)
from The Mistress; or, Love poems, 1647

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

Abraham Cowley biography

Sunday, May 5, 2019

Early May in New England / Percy MacKaye


Early May in New England

Strawberry-flower and violet
Are come, but the wind blows coldly yet;
And robin's-egg skies brood sunny chill
Where hyacinth summer sleeps under the hill
     And the frog is still.

Applebloom floats on the warm blue river.
But white shad-blossoms ripple and shiver,
And purple-grackle pipes till his blithe heart grieves,
For his gladdest songs, through the little elm-leaves,
     Are but make-believes.

~~
Percy MacKaye (1875-1956)
from The Sistine Eve, and other poems, 1915

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada and the United States]

Percy MacKaye biography

Saturday, May 4, 2019

In the Glad Month of May / Coningsby Dawson


In the Glad Month of May

In the glad month of May,
When morning was breaking,
She rose from her body
And vanished away.

From a tree cloaked in gray
A shrill bird kept calling,
"Come quick. God is waiting.
He cannot delay."

We had no heart to pray,
But, seeing her glory,
Said, "Go, little sister;
God needs you to-day."

Very stilly she lay:
The bird had ceased calling —
We let in the morning
And kissed her dear clay.

~~
Coningsby Dawson (1883-1959)
from A Vision of Florence, and other poems, 1916

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada and the United States]

Coningsby Dawson biography

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

I can remember / Stephan Pickering


I can remember ... אני יכול לזכור

I. 

in the ashes of Auschwitz
February 2018 / Shevat 5778
there exists no
kol hachavvyot,
the Infinite One bring/ing
all of reality into be-ing.

there is no 'ehyeh 'asher 'ehyeh
who formed Light,
who created Darkness.

II. 

the candles of the Vanished
World are no longer
sown in the seasons of breath.

in 1920 Vilna, Yehu'dit bones
were excavated for horses
to be buried,
all by the tongue of a priest
covered in ambergris.

in 2018 Cyberia alleys,
the malefactor mime cries
as Long Island parhelia
flicker in the seasonal
ice around his little girls.

III. 

the cypress of the
Kingdom of Night are
amidst natz'ri house gardens,
marking in the mouths of
opus dei children the straws
of Poland.

long after midnight we seek
solace in One-Eyed Paritus's
Meditations obliques,
where Sol Nazerman's
zoharic midrashim of
Shabtai Zisel are
narrated by Claude Lanzmann.

the quantum nonlocality
of the corpse of
ha'Kodesh Barukh hu
is the Hollerith tracking
number.

IV. 

Nach uraltem, aengstlich beheutetem
Klostergeheimnis lernen selbst Greise
muehelos Kavier spielen.
– Max Ernst

~~
this is to the memories z"l of 
Rod Steiger 14 April 1925-9 July 2002 
Roman Vischniac 19 August 1897-22 January 1990 
Rose Leamel Ziebell (1933-2007) 
Dottie Sutton (1922-2015) 
and to the Presence of two of my children in Yisra'el 
and the memories of two sons z"l 

STEPHAN PICKERING / חפץ ח"ם בן אברהם
© 3 February 2018 / 18 Shevat 5778 - slightly revised 14 April 2019 / 9 Nisan 5779

[All rights reserved - used with permission]


Child survivors at Auschwitz, 1945. Photo by Alexander Voroncov. 
Courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Penny's Top 20 / April 2019


Penny's Top 20
The most-visited poems on  The Penny Blog in April 2019:

  1.  The Bright Extensive Will, AE Reiff
  2.  Calmly We Walk through This April's Day, Delmore Schwartz
  3.  Philomela, Philip Sidney
  4.  Angel Standing in the Sun, AE Reiff
  5.  A Russian Easter, Marya Zaturenska
  6.  Spring's Sacrament, Harold E. Goad
  7.  Berkshires in April, Clement Wood
  8.  Under the April Moon, Bliss Carman
  9.  
Esthetique du Mal, Wallace Stevens
10.  The Thrush's Song, James Lewis Milligan


11.  Welcome to Spring, Ring Lardner
12.  Waiting, Charles Hanson Towne
13.  Songs, Demonspawn
14.  The March Orchard, Ethelwyn Wetherald
15.  News, AE Reiff
16.  The Dwarf, Wallace Stevens
17.  Icicle Drops, Arthur John Lockhart
18.  Penny; or, Penny's Hat, George J. Dance
19.  February's Forgotten Mitts, Raymond Knister
20.  Written in March, William Wordsworth


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