tableau vivant

August 7, 2006

Tartary – Walter de la Mare

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 7:52 am

    If I were Lord of Tartary,
    Myself, and me alone,
    My bed should be of ivory,
    Of beaten gold my throne;
    And in my court should peacocks flaunt,
    And in my forests tigers haunt,
    And in my pools great fishes slant
    Their fins athwart the sun.

    If I were Lord of Tartary,
    Trumpeters every day
    To all my meals should summon me,
    And in my courtyards bray;
    And in the evening lamps should shine,
    Yellow as honey, red as wine,
    While harp, and flute, and mandoline
    Made music sweet and gay.

    If I were Lord of Tartary,
    I’d wear a robe of beads,
    White, and gold, and green they’d be —
    And small and thick as seeds;
    And ere should wane the morning star,
    I’d don my robe and scimitar.
    And zebras seven should draw my car
    Through Tartary’s dark gleades.

    Lord of the fruits of Tartary.
    Her rivers silver-pale!
    Lord of the hills of Tartary.
    Glen, thicket, wood, and dale!
    Her flashing stars, her scented breeze,
    Her trembling lakes, like foamless seas,
    Her bird-delighting citron-trees,
    In every purple vale!

Earth – Derek Walcott

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 7:49 am

    Let the day grow on you upward
    through your feet,
    the vegetal knuckles,

    to your knees of stone,
    until by evening you are a black tree;
    feel, with evening,

    the swifts thicken your hair,
    the new moon rising out of your forehead,
    and the moonlit veins of silver

    running from your armpits
    like rivulets under white leaves.
    Sleep, as ants

    cross over your eyelids.
    You have never possessed anything
    as deeply as this.

    This is all you have owned
    from the first outcry
    through forever;

    you can never be dispossessed.

First Evening – Arthur Rimbaud

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 7:46 am

    Her clothes were almost off;
    Outside, a curious tree
    Beat a branch at the window
    To see what it could see.

    Perched on my enormous easy chair,
    Half nude, she clasped her hands.
    Her feet trembled on the floor,
    As soft as they could be.

    I watched as a ray of pale light,
    Trapped in the tree outside,
    Danced from her mouth
    To her breast, like a fly on a flower.

    I kissed her delicate ankles.
    She had a soft, brusque laugh
    That broke into shining crystals -
    A pretty little laugh.

    Her feet ducked under her chemise;
    “Will you please stop it!…”
    But I laughed at her cries -
    I knew she really liked it.

    Her eye trembled beneath my lips;
    They closed at my touch.
    Her head went back; she cried:
    “Oh, really! That’s too much!

    “My dear, I’m warning you…”
    I stopped her protest with a kiss
    And she laughed, low -
    A laugh that wanted more than this…

    Her clothes were almost off;
    Outside, a curious tree
    Beat a branch at the window
    To see what it could see.

The Vintage Man – Hafiz

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 7:41 am

    The
    Difference
    Between a good artist
    And a great one

    Is:

    The novice
    Will often lay down his tool
    Or brush

    Then pick up an invisible club
    On the mind’s table

    And helplessly smash the easels and
    Jade.

    Whereas the vintage man
    No longer hurts himself or anyone

    And keeps on
    Sculpting
    Light.

What We Want – Linda Pastan

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 7:35 am

    What we want
    is never simple.
    We move among the things
    we thought we wanted:
    a face, a room, an open book
    and these things bear our names–
    now they want us.
    But what we want appears
    in dreams, wearing disguises.
    We fall past,
    holding out our arms
    and in the morning
    our arms ache.
    We don’t remember the dream,
    but the dream remembers us.
    It is there all day
    as an animal is there
    under the table,
    as the stars are there
    even in full sun.

My November Guest – Robert Frost

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 7:29 am

    My Sorrow, when she’s here with me,
    Thinks these dark days of autumn rain
    Are beautiful as days can be;
    She loves the bare, the withered tree;
    She walks the sodden pasture lane.

    Her pleasure will not let me stay.
    She talks and I am fain to list:
    She’s glad the birds are gone away,
    She’s glad her simple worsted grey
    Is silver now with clinging mist.

    The desolate, deserted trees,
    The faded earth, the heavy sky,
    The beauties she so truly sees,
    She thinks I have no eye for these,
    And vexes me for reason why.

    Not yesterday I learned to know
    The love of bare November days
    Before the coming of the snow,
    But it were vain to tell her so,
    And they are better for her praise

Lemon Pie – Edgar Albert Guest

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 7:18 am

    The world is full of gladness,
    There are joys of many kinds,
    There’s a cure for every sadness,
    That each troubled mortal finds.
    And my little cares grow lighter
    And I cease to fret and sigh,
    And my eyes with joy grow brighter
    When she makes a lemon pie.

    When the bronze is on the filling
    That’s one mass of shining gold,
    And its molten joy is spilling
    On the plate, my heart grows bold
    And the kids and I in chorus
    Raise one glad exultant cry
    And we cheer the treat before us
    Which is mother’s lemon pie.

    Then the little troubles vanish,
    And the sorrows disappear,
    Then we find the grit to banish
    All the cares that hovered near,
    And we smack our lips in pleasure
    O’er a joy no coin can buy,
    And we down the golden treasure
    Which is known as lemon pie.

I Loved You – Alexander Pushkin

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 7:07 am

    I loved you; even now I must confess,
    Some embers of my love their fire retain;
    But do not let it cause you more distress,
    I do not want to sadden you again.
    Hopeless and tonguetied, yet I loved you dearly
    With pangs the jealous and the timid know;
    So tenderly I love you, so sincerely,
    I pray God grant another love you so.

Sonnet Of The Sweet Complaint – Federico Garcia Lorca

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 6:58 am

    Never let me lose the marvel
    of your statue-like eyes, or the accent
    the solitary rose of your breath
    places on my cheek at night.

    I am afraid of being, on this shore,
    a branchless trunk, and what I most regret
    is having no flower, pulp, or clay
    for the worm of my despair.

    If you are my hidden treasure,
    if you are my cross, my dampened pain,
    if I am a dog, and you alone my master,

    never let me lose what I have gained,
    and adorn the branches of your river
    with leaves of my estranged Autumn.

The Railway Train – E Dickinson

Filed under: Poetry — by cerene @ 6:54 am

    I like to see it lap the miles,
    And lick the valleys up,
    And stop to feed itself at tanks;
    And then, prodigious, step

    Around a pile of mountains,
    And, supercilious, peer
    In shanties by the sides of roads;
    And then a quarry pare

    To fit its sides, and crawl between,
    Complaining all the while
    In horrid, hooting stanza;
    Then chase itself down the hill

    And neigh like Boanerges;
    Then, punctual as a star,
    Stop – docile and omnipotent -
    At its own stable door.

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