Saturday, August 31, 2024

The Grotto / Barry Cornwall


from Diego de Montilla

LIV

And often to a grotto did he hie
    Which in a lone and distant forest stood,
Just like a wood-nymph's haunt; and he would lie
    Beneath the cover of its arch so rude,
For there when the August sun had mounted high,
    And all was silent but the stock-dove's brood,
The whispering zephyr sometimes 'rose unseen,
And kissed the leaves and boughs of tender green.


LV

And every shrub that fond wind flatter'd cast
    Back a perfuming sigh, and rustling roll'd
Its virgin branches 'till they mov'd at last
    The neighbour tree, and the great forest old
Did homage to the zephyr as he past:
    And gently to and fro' the fruits of gold
Swayed in the air, and scarcely with a sound
The beeches shook their dark nuts to the ground.


LVI

Before the entrance of that grotto flow'd
    A quiet streamlet, cool and never dull,
Wherein the many-colour'd pebbles glow'd,
    And sparkled thro' its water beautiful,
And thereon the shy wild-fowl often rode,
    And on its grassy margin you might cull
Flowers and healing plants: a hermit spot
And, once seen, never to be quite forgot.

~~
Barry Cornwall (1787-1874)
from
A Sicilian Story, with Diego de Montilla, and other poems, 1820.

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]


Daderot, Grotto, Stowe, Buckinghamshire, England. Public domain, Wikimedia Commons.

Sunday, August 25, 2024

Long Island Sound / Emma Lazarus


Long Island Sound

I see it as it looked one afternoon
In August,— by a fresh soft breeze o’erblown.
The swiftness of the tide, the light thereon,
A far-off sail, white as a crescent moon.
The shining waters with pale currents strewn,
The quiet fishing-smacks, the Eastern cove,
The semi-circle of its dark, green grove.
The luminous grasses, and the merry sun
In the grave sky; the sparkle far and wide,
Laughter of unseen children, cheerful chirp
Of crickets, and low lisp of rippling tide,
Light summer clouds fantastical as sleep
Changing unnoted while I gazed thereon.
All these fair sounds and sights I made my own.

~~
Emma Lazarus (1849-1887)
from Poems, 1888

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

Emma Lazarus biography

"Long Island Sound" read by Elena Faverio. Courtesy EastLine Theatre.

Saturday, August 24, 2024

August / Edwin Arnold


from The Twelve Months

August

(From the German)


Gerda Arendt, Apple tree in field, Ehrenbach
Once, with a landlord wondrous fine,
    A weary guest, I tarried;
A golden pippin was his sign,
    Upon a green branch carried!

Mine host — he was an apple-tree
    With whom I took my leisure;
Fair fruit, and mellowed juicily,
    He gave me from his treasure.

There came to that same hostel gay
    Bright guests, in brave adorning;
A merry feast they made all day,
    And sang, and slept till morning.

I, too, to rest my body laid
    On bed of crimson clover;
The landlord with his own broad shade
    Carefully spread me over.

I rose; — I called to pay the score,
    But "No!" he grandly boweth;
Now, root and fruit, for evermore
    God bless him, while he groweth!

~~
Edwin Arnold (1832-1904)
from Poems: National and non-oriental, 1906

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

Sunday, August 18, 2024

August / George J. Dance


August

Sun-hardened earth
waits panting for the first crack
of thunder,

~~
George J. Dance, 2007
from Doggerel, and other doggerel, 2015

Dominicus Johannes Bergsma, Under the influence of sun and wind torn earth (detail).

Creative Commons License
["August" by George J. Dance is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Canada License]

Saturday, August 17, 2024

The Summer Shower / Thomas Buchanan Read


The Summer Shower

    Before the stout harvesters falleth the grain,
    As when the strong storm-wind is reaping the plain;
    And loiters the boy in the briery lane;
    But yonder aslant comes the silvery rain,
Like a long line of spears brightly burnished and tall.

    Adown the white highway, like cavalry fleet,
    It dashes the dust with its numberless feet.
    Like a murmurless school, in their leafy retreat,
    The wild birds sit listening, the drops round them beat;
And the boy crouches close to the blackberry wall.

    The swallows alone take the storm on their wing,
    And, taunting the tree-sheltered laborers, sing.
    Like pebbles the rain breaks the face of the spring,
    While a bubble darts up from each widening ring;
And the boy, in dismay, hears the loud shower fall.

    But soon are the harvesters tossing the sheaves;
    The robin darts out from its bower of leaves;
    The wren peereth forth from the moss-covered eaves;
    And the rain-spattered urchin now gladly perceives
That the beautiful bow bendeth over them all.

~~
Thomas Buchanan Read (1822-1872)
from Poems, 1847

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]



Tomasz Sienicki, Regenschauer, 2003. CC BY 3.0, Wikimedia Commons.

Sunday, August 11, 2024

Evening / Katherine Hale


from The Island

Evening

An August evening,
Pale-blue and silver and the moon ahead,
And the canoe, if you should turn it westward,
Glazed to a lacquer red.

We had set up our house:
A fireplace of the island stone,
And a mat of moss,
A tent, and a balsam bed,
And a table made of a pine.

And through the twilight’s fading line
We paddled far down the bay
To look at the place so far away
Where the inns and the tourists belong,
The place we had left so hurriedly
When we heard the sound of a song.

Being established in magic,
Householders you might say,
It was safe enough to glance at the past
From our supernatural bay.

But then we went fishing instead!
And something reached out of the twilight,
Something so old and magnetic
Something so sure and prevailing
It seemed we might better obey —
For a song has a certain conviction
Heard at the end of the day.

~~
Katherine Hale (1878-1956)
from
The Island, and other poems, 1934

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


Michael Klajban, Secretary Island, British Columbia (detail), 2018. 

Saturday, August 10, 2024

August Moon / J.C. Squire


August Moon

(To F.S.)

In the smooth grey heaven is poised the pale half moon
And sheds on the wide grey river a broken reflection.
Out from the low church-tower the boats are moored
After the heat of the day, and await the dark.

And here, where the side of the road shelves into the river
At the gap where barges load and horses drink,
There are no horses. And the river is full
And the water stands by the shore and does not lap.

And a barge lies up for the night this side of the island,
The bargeman sits in the bows and smokes his pipe
And his wife by the cabin stirs. Behind me voices pass.

Calm sky, calm river: and a few calm things reflected.
And all as yet keep their colours; the island osiers,
The ash-white spots of umbelliferous flowers,
And the yellow clay of its bank, the barge's brown sails
That are furled up the mast and then make a lean triangle
To the end of the hoisted boom, and the high dark slips
Where they used to build vessels, and now build them no more.

All in the river reflected in quiet colours.
Beyond the river sweeps round in a bend, and is vast,
A wide grey level under the motionless sky
And the waxing moon, clean cut in the mole-grey sky.
Silence. Time is suspended; that the light fails
One would not know were it not for the moon in the sky,
And the broken moon in the water, whose fractures tell
Of slow broad ripples that otherwise do not show,
Maturing imperceptibly from a pale to a deeper gold,
A golden half moon in the sky, and broken gold in the water.

In the water, tranquilly severing, joining, gold:
Three or four little plates of gold on the river:
A little motion of gold between the dark images
Of two tall posts that stand in the grey water.

There are voices passing, a murmur of quiet voices,
A woman's laugh, and children going home.
A whispering couple, leaning over the railings,
And, somewhere, a little splash as a dog goes in.

I have always known all this, it has always been,
There is no change anywhere, nothing will ever change.

I heard a story, a crazy and tiresome myth.

Listen! behind the twilight a deep low sound
Like the constant shutting of very distant doors,

Doors that are letting people over there
Out to some other place beyond the end of the sky.

~~
J.C. Squire (1884-1958)
from Poems: First series, 1918

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

J.C. Squire biography

Oliver H, Moon on Rance River, August 2014 (detail). CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons.

Sunday, August 4, 2024

A Summer Night / Matthew Arnold


A Summer Night

        In the deserted, moon-blanch'd street,
How lonely rings the echo of my feet!
Those windows which I gaze at, frown,
Silent and white, unopening down,
Repellent as the world: – but see!
A break between the housetops shows
The moon, and, lost behind her, fading dim
Into the dewy dark obscurity
Down at the far horizon's rim,
    Doth a whole tract of heaven disclose.

        And to my mind the thought
Is on a sudden brought
Of a past night, and a far different scene.
Headlands stood out into the moonlit deep
As clearly as at noon;
The spring-tide's brimming flow
Heaved dazzlingly between;
Houses, with long white sweep,
Girdled the glistening bay;
Behind, through the soft air,
The blue haze-cradled mountains spread away.
    That night was far more fair;
But the same restless pacings to and fro,
And the same vainly throbbing heart was there,
And the same bright, calm moon.

        And the calm moonlight seems to say –
Hast thou then still the old unquiet breast
Which neither deadens into rest
Nor ever feels the fiery glow
That whirls the spirit from itself away,
But fluctuates to and fro
Never by passion quite posses'd
And never quite benumb'd by the world's sway? 
 –
And I, I know not if to pray
Still to be what I am, or yield and be
Like all the other men I see.

        For most men in a brazen prison live,
Where, in the sun's hot eye,
With heads bent o'er their toil, they languidly
Their lives to some unmeaning taskwork give,
Dreaming of nought beyond their prison wall.
And as, year after year,
Fresh products of their barren labour fall
From their tired hands, and rest
Never yet comes more near,
Gloom settles slowly down over their breast.
And while they try to stem
The waves of mournful thought by which they are prest,
Death in their prison reaches them
Unfreed, having seen nothing, still unblest.

        And the rest, a few,
Escape their prison and depart
On the wide ocean of life anew.
There the freed prisoner, where'er his heart
Listeth, will sail;
Nor doth he know how there prevail,
Despotic on that sea,
Trade-winds which cross it from eternity.
    Awhile he holds some false way, undebarr'd
By thwarting signs, and braves
The freshening wind and blackening waves,
And then the tempest strikes him, and between
The lightning-bursts is seen
Only a driving wreck,
And the pale Master on his spar-strewn deck
With anguished face and flying hair
Grasping the rudder hard,
Still bent to make some port he knows not where,
Still standing for some false, impossible shore.
    And sterner comes the roar
Of sea and wind, and through the deepening gloom
Fainter and fainter wreck and helmsman loom,
And he too disappears, and comes no more.

        Is there no life, but these alone? 
Madman or slave must man be one?

        Plainness and clearness without shadow of stain!
Clearness divine!
Ye heavens, whose pure dark regions have no sign
Of languor, though so calm, and, though so great
Are yet untroubled and unpassionate:
Who though so noble share in the world's toil,
And, though so task'd, keep free from dust and soil:
I will not say that your mild deeps retain
A tinge, it may be, of their silent pain
Who have long'd deeply once, and long'd in vain;
But I will rather say that you remain
A world above man's head, to let him see
How boundless might his soul's horizons be,
How vast, yet of what clear transparency.
How it were good to abide there, and breathe free;
How fair a lot to fill
Is left to each man still.

~~
Matthew Arnold (1822-1888), 1852
from
Poems: Second series, 1853

[Poem is in the public domain worldwide]

Matthew Arnold biography

Saturday, August 3, 2024

August Child / Marion Strobel


August Child


Harold Harvey (1874–1941), Two young girls
 with a butterfly, 1929. Wikimedia Commons.
She would watch a butterfly
Yellow-filmed against the sun,
Blue against the sky.

She would keep the broken wings –
There were gold ones, there was one
Brown with scarlet rings.

And no matter if the heat
Ran like flame upon the land,
She was there, and sweet.

Color moving, color drifting
Was her yellow dress. Her hand
Was color lifting.
 
With the sky more blue than blue,
She was more and less than true,
Who was always more than fair
Butterflied upon the air.

~~
Marion Strobel (1895-1967)
from Poetry, February 1928

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

Marion Strobel biography

Friday, August 2, 2024

August's featured poem


The Penny Blog's featured poem for August 2024:

The Beach in August, by Weldon Kees

The day the fat woman
In the bright blue bathing suit
Walked into the water and died,
I thought about the human
Condition. 
[...]


Thursday, August 1, 2024

Penny's Top 20 / July 2024

                                      

Penny's Top 20

The most-visited poems on  The Penny Blog in July 2024:


  1.  Logos, George J. Dance
  2.  In Young July, Lucy Larcom
  3.  Ode to Sport, Pierre de Coubertin
  4.  When Summer Comes, Sophia Almon Hensley
  5.  July, Susan Hartley Swett
  6.  Canada, Pauline Johnson
  7.  The Succession of the Four Sweet Months, Robert Herrick
  8.  A Rhyme of Summer, James Berry Bensel
  9.  America, Claude McKay
10.  Large Red Man Reading, Wallace Stevens

11.  A Summer Morning, George Henry Boker
12.  Bath, Amy Lowell
13.  A Lost Morning, Herman Charles Merivale
14.  July, Edwin Arnold
15.  The Red Wheelbarrow, William Carlos Williams
16.  Connecticut Autumn, Hyam Plutzik
17.  May, Edward Thurlow
18.  Amarant, AE Reiff
19.  A June Day, Philip Bourke Marston
20. On the Road to the Sea, Charlotte Mew

Source: Blogger, "Stats"