tableau vivant

July 23, 2006

Away With Funeral Music – Robert Louis Stevenson

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:34 pm

    AWAY with funeral music – set
    The pipe to powerful lips -
    The cup of life’s for him that drinks
    And not for him that sips

To Be In Love – Gwendolyn Brooks

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:31 pm

    To be in love
    Is to touch with a lighter hand.
    In yourself you stretch, you are well.
    You look at things
    Through his eyes.
    A cardinal is red.
    A sky is blue.
    Suddenly you know he knows too.
    He is not there but
    You know you are tasting together
    The winter, or a light spring weather.
    His hand to take your hand is overmuch.
    Too much to bear.
    You cannot look in his eyes
    Because your pulse must not say
    What must not be said.
    When he
    Shuts a door-
    Is not there_
    Your arms are water.
    And you are free
    With a ghastly freedom.
    You are the beautiful half
    Of a golden hurt.
    You remember and covet his mouth
    To touch, to whisper on.
    Oh when to declare
    Is certain Death!
    Oh when to apprize
    Is to mesmerize,
    To see fall down, the Column of Gold,
    Into the commonest ash.

Along the field as we came by – AE Housman

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:28 pm

    ALONG the field as we came by
    A year ago, my love and I,
    The aspen over stile and stone
    Was talking to itself alone.
    ‘Oh who are these that kiss and pass?
    A country lover and his lass;
    Two lovers looking to be wed;
    And time shall put them both to bed,
    But she shall lie with earth above,
    And he beside another love.’

    And sure enough beneath the tree
    There walks another love with me,
    And overhead the aspen heaves
    Its rainy-sounding silver leaves;
    And I spell nothing in their stir,
    But now perhaps they speak to her,
    And plain for her to understand
    They talk about a time at hand
    When I shall sleep with clover clad,
    And she beside another lad.

The Fool By The Roadside – WB Yeats

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:21 pm

    When all works that have
    From cradle run to grave
    From grave to cradle run instead;
    When thoughts that a fool
    Has wound upon a spool
    Are but loose thread, are but loose thread;

    When cradle and spool are past
    And I mere shade at last
    Coagulate of stuff
    Transparent like the wind,
    I think that I may find
    A faithful love, a faithful love.

Rainy Nights – Dorothy Parker

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:18 pm

    Ghosts of all my lovely sins,
    Who attend too well my pillow,
    Gay the wanton rain begins;
    Hide the limp and tearful willow.

    Turn aside your eyes and ears,
    Trail away your robes of sorrow,
    You shall have my further years-
    You shall walk with me tomorrow.

    I am sister to the rain;
    Fey and sudden and unholy,
    Petulant at the windowpane,
    Quickly lost, remembered slowly.

    I have lived with shades, a shade;
    I am hung with graveyard flowers.
    Let me be tonight arrayed
    In the silver of the showers.

    Every fragile thing shall rust;
    When another April passes
    I may be a furry dust,
    Sifting through the brittle grasses.

    All sweet sins shall be forgot;
    Who will live to tell their siring?
    Hear me now, nor let me rot
    Wistful still, and still aspiring.

    Ghosts of dear temptations, heed;
    I am frail, be you forgiving.
    See you not that I have need
    To be living with the living?

    Sail, tonight, the Styx’s breast;
    Glide among the dim processions
    Of the exquisite unblest,
    Spirits of my shared transgressions,

    Roam with young Persephone.
    Plucking poppies for your slumber . . .
    With the morrow, there shall be
    One more wraith among your number.

Tact – Edwin Arlington Robinson

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:13 pm

    Observant of the way she told
    So much of what was true,
    No vanity could long withhold
    Regard that was her due:
    She spared him the familiar guide,
    So easily achieved,
    That only made a man to smile
    And left him undeceived.

    Aware that all imagining
    Of more than what she meant
    Would urge an end of everything,
    He stayed; and when he went,
    They parted with a merry word
    That was to him as light
    As any that was ever heard
    Upon a starry night.

    She smiled a little, knowing well
    That he would not remark
    The ruins of the a day that fell
    Around her in the dark:
    He saw no ruins anywhere,
    Nor fancied there were scars
    On anyone who lingered there,
    Along below the stars.

Lying in me – Anna Akhmatova

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:11 pm

    Lying in me, as though it were a white
    Stone in the depths of a well, is one
    Memory that I cannot, will not, fight:
    It is happiness, and it is pain.
    Anyone looking straight into my eyes
    Could not help seeing it, and could not fail
    To become thoughtful, more sad and quiet
    Than if he were listening to some tragic tale.

    I know the gods changed people into things,
    Leaving their consciousness alive and free.
    To keep alive the wonder of suffering,
    You have been metamorphosed into me.

The Lesson – Roger McGough

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:09 pm

    Chaos ruled OK in the classroom
    as bravely the teacher walked in
    the nooligans ignored him
    hid voice was lost in the din

    “The theme for today is violence
    and homework will be set
    I’m going to teach you a lesson
    one that you’ll never forget”

    He picked on a boy who was shouting
    and throttled him then and there
    then garrotted the girl behind him
    (the one with grotty hair)

    Then sword in hand he hacked his way
    between the chattering rows
    “First come, first severed” he declared
    “fingers, feet or toes”

    He threw the sword at a latecomer
    it struck with deadly aim
    then pulling out a shotgun
    he continued with his game

    The first blast cleared the backrow
    (where those who skive hang out)
    they collapsed like rubber dinghies
    when the plug’s pulled out

    “Please may I leave the room sir?”
    a trembling vandal enquired
    “Of course you may” said teacher
    put the gun to his temple and fired

    The Head popped a head round the doorway
    to see why a din was being made
    nodded understandingly
    then tossed in a grenade

    And when the ammo was well spent
    with blood on every chair
    Silence shuffled forward
    with its hands up in the air

    The teacher surveyed the carnage
    the dying and the dead
    He waggled a finger severely
    “Now let that be a lesson” he said

The Rambler – Thomas Hardy

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:05 pm

    I do not see the hills around,
    Nor mark the tints the copses wear;
    I do not note the grassy ground
    And constellated daisies there.

    I hear not the contralto note
    Of cuckoos hid on either hand,
    The whirr that shakes the nighthawk’s throat
    When eve’s brown awning hoods the land.

    Some say each songster, tree and mead–
    All eloquent of love divine–
    Receives their constant careful heed:
    Such keen appraisement is not mine.

    The tones around me that I hear,
    The aspects, meanings, shapes I see,
    Are those far back ones missed when near,
    And now perceived too late by me!

When Diamonds are a Legend – E Dickinson

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 5:01 pm

    When Diamonds are a Legend,
    And Diadems—a Tale—
    I Brooch and Earrings for Myself,
    Do sow, and Raise for sale—

    And tho’ I’m scarce accounted,
    My Art, a Summer Day—had Patrons—
    Once—it was a Queen—
    And once—a Butterfly—

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