Showing posts with label Silence in the Snowy Fields. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silence in the Snowy Fields. Show all posts

Monday, January 5, 2009

Robert Bly's Near Perfect Book of Poetry, Part II




In an earlier post, I featured a couple of poems from Robert Bly's Silence in the Snowy Fields, which was reader selected for the Near Perfect Books of Poetry list. I've got one more poem that particularly grabbed me that I thought worth sharing:


-----------------Late At Night
----------During A Visit Of Friends


-----------------------------I
We spent all day fishing and talking.
At last, late at night, I sit at my desk alone.
And rise and walk out in the summery night.
A dark thing hopped near me in the grass.

----------------------------II
The trees were breathing, the windmill slowly pumped.
Overhead the rainclouds that rained on Ortonville
Covered half the stars.
The air was still cool from their rain.

----------------------------III
It is very late.
I am the only one awake.
Men and women I love are sleeping nearby.

----------------------------IV
The human face shines as it speaks of things
Near itself, thoughts full of dreams.
The human face shines like a dark sky
As it speaks of those things that oppress the living.
Robert Bly


If you'd like to hear Bly read some of his recent work, check out this site.



best,
Don

Friday, January 2, 2009

Robert Bly's Silence in the Snowy Fields and More





The book by Robert Bly chosen for the Near Perfect Book of Poetry list is Silence in the Snowy Fields. The book was written largely at the same time and in the same location as much of The Branch Will Not Break by James Wright. In fact, Bly is the friend referred to in The Blessing, which was featured in last Thursday's post.

As you know if you are a regular around here, the Near Perfect list is reader nominated and remains an ongoing project. As such, I don't necessarily have to agree with the choices; this is a communal thing. I hope to be featuring a poem or three from each of the nominated books by way of sharing the work valued by regular readers of poetry.

Which brings us back to Silence in the Snowy Fields. I'm a fan of Robert Bly, I think he has written more than his share of very good poems and has done more promoting the art of poetry than many of our laureates ever have. That being said, I've read Silence through twice over the past couple of months and, well, it didn't really grab me in a big way. So, this is by way of saying I'm not the final arbiter in this. I featured one poem from Silence back in July. Here are two more that stood out for me:




Watering The Horse

How strange to think of giving up all ambition!
Suddenly I see with such clear eyes
The white flake of snow
That has just fallen in the horse's mane!





Where We Must Look For Help

The dove returns: it found no resting place:
It was in flight all night above the shaken seas;
Beneath ark eaves
The dove shall magnify the tiger's bed;
Give the dove peace.
The split-tail swallows leave the sill at dawn;
At dusk, blue swallows shall return.
On the third day the crow shall fly;
The crow, the crow, the spider-colored crow,
The crow shall find new mud to walk upon.



The horses on Bly's farm played a large part in American poetry it would seem. The second poem feels pretty average until you hit the last two lines; suddenly the language rises to the image, transmutes to archetypal myth, and we are forced to see the cliche of a familiar story in a very different way.

Silence
was Bly's first book and it is considered groundbreaking for its time, clearing out some of the cobwebs of what had been for many years a fairly staid American poetry scene. I'll be sharing one more poem from Silence in the coming days. For a very sizable preview of Silence in the Snowy Fields, check it out in google books.

This week's featured back issue of Lilliput Review is #60, a little different in layout and approach. It even comes with a title: "Poems Without Segues II." The whole idea was a matter of expediency; I had more poems on hand than I could, at that time, deal with, and so threw nuance to the wind and simply printed them. #60 was originally published in August 1994.



Artwork by Harland Ristau


Since the scan actually includes 6 poems from the cover (click on the image above for a readable version), I'll be featuring more poems than usual. What follows are some selections from the other 7 jam-packed pages.



breezy--
the spider's thread
warps a sunbeam
William Hart




waves break
on the cusp
of our bed--
I cradle
her moans,
moonlit
between my
crescent thighs
Janet Mason



from Rainy Day Sweetish Bakery
I think the rain
is falling
on my mother's
grave I think
it falls
very quietly.
I think there
is a tree there
and it catches
the drops
and sifts them
down
silently.
Albert Huffstickler






Ely Cathedral

Seeing you from a distance
I knew at once
O Ship of the Fens
How right it was
to make you metaphor
Hugh Hennedy






There is me
and this tree
and that bird

and there is morning.
Suzanne Bowers






trumpet curves stagelight -
the rainy street outside
christien gholson







Self Aggrandizing Poet
The head of the dead window box
flower bows away from
the grimy window in
the town with
your name.
K. Shabee






And a Brobdingnag poem from Huff:


Laundromat

This is how Hopper would have painted it:
the line of yellow dryers
catching the sunlight from the broad window.
Man with his hand reached up to the coin slot,
head turned to the side as though reflecting,
woman bent over the wide table
intent on sorting,
another standing hands at her side, looking off -
as though visiting another country;
each thing as it is,
not reaching beyond the scene for his symbols,
saying merely, "On such and such a day,
it was just as I show you."
Each person, each object, static
but the light a pilgrim.
Albert Huffstickler




best,
Don