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Unread 11-10-2012, 01:35 PM
Carolyn Thomas-Coxhead Carolyn Thomas-Coxhead is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Norfolk, UK
Posts: 121
Default Nos 58 and 59

No 58
May I suggest The Gods of Winter by Dana Gioia? (1991) It was chosen by the Poetry Book Society and I have loved it ever since I found it. The poem quoted here, “Planting a Sequoia” is just beautiful and stays with me both for its ideas and for the beauty of its lyrical harmonies.

All afternoon my brothers and I have worked in the orchard,
Digging this hole, laying you into it, carefully packing the soil.
Rain blackened the horizon, but cold winds kept it over the Pacific,
And the sky above us stayed the dull gray
Of an old year coming to an end.

In Sicily a father plants a tree to celebrate his first son’s birth–
An olive or a fig tree–a sign that the earth has one more life to bear.
I would have done the same, proudly laying new stock into my father’s orchard,
A green sapling rising among the twisted apple boughs,
A promise of new fruit in other autumns.

But today we kneel in the cold planting you, our native giant,
Defying the practical custom of our fathers,
Wrapping in your roots a lock of hair, a piece of an infant’s birth cord,
All that remains above earth of a first-born son,
A few stray atoms brought back to the elements.

We will give you what we can–our labor and our soil,
Water drawn from the earth when the skies fail,
Nights scented with the ocean fog, days softened by the circuit of bees.
We plant you in the corner of the grove, bathed in western light,
A slender shoot against the sunset.

And when our family is no more, all of his unborn brothers dead,
Every niece and nephew scattered, the house torn down,
His mother’s beauty ashes in the air,
I want you to stand among strangers, all young and ephemeral to you,
Silently keeping the secret of your birth.

And from The Antipodes I also love
No 59 Les Murray (New Collected Poems) – rather general, not a specific volume.. Here’s
"Performance":

I starred that night, I shone:
I was footwork and firework in one,

a rocket that wriggled up and shot
darkness with a parasol of brilliants
and a peewee descant on a flung bit;
I was busters of glitter-bombs expanding
to mantle and aurora from a crown,
I was fouéttes, falls of blazing paint,
para-flares spot-welding cloudy heaven,
loose gold off fierce toeholds of white,
a finale red-tongued as a haka leap:
that too was a butt of all right!

As usual after any triumph, I was
of course, inconsolable.


from
Subhuman Redneck Poems, 1996, which is as good as any.

Last edited by Carolyn Thomas-Coxhead; 11-10-2012 at 01:38 PM. Reason: My formatting seemed to get lost, which means the stanzas vanished
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