Thursday, May 27, 2010

Encounter


.







We were riding through frozen fields in a wagon at dawn. 
A red wing rose in the darkness.

And suddenly a hare ran across the road. 
One of us pointed to it with his hand.

That was long ago. Today neither of them is alive, 
Not the hare, nor the man who made the gesture.

O my love, where are they, where are they going? 
The flash of a hand, streak of movement, rustle of pebbles. 
I ask not out of sorrow, but in wonder.







~ Czeslaw Milosz

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

poetry reading


.



I'm curled into a ball
like a dog
that is cold.

Who will tell me 
why I was born,
why this monstrosity
called life.

The telephone rings.  I have to give
a poetry reading.

I enter.
A hundred people, a hundred pairs of eyes.
They look, they wait.

I am supposed to tell them
why they were born,
why there is 
this monstrosity called life.




~  Anna Swirszczynska
translated by Czeslaw Milosz and Leonard Nathan




never surrender a good question


.
.
A man tortured by doubt travels a great distance 
hoping to ask a famous teacher his question. 
 
 At first, the teacher's disciples will not allow the stranger into the study house, 
but one day he finds a way to slip in, approaches the Rebbe, and speaks:
 
 'Venerable Rebbe, forgive me for disturbing you,
 but I have traveled many weeks and waited many days
 for the chance to ask you a question 
that has troubled me all my adult life.' 
 
 'What is your question?', the teacher responds.  
 
The man asks, 'What is the essence of truth?'  
 
The Rebbe looks at his visitor for a moment, 
rises from his chair, approaches, and slaps him hard.
  Then he withdraws again to his books.
  
Shocked, the questioner retreats to a tavern across the way,
 bitterly and loudly complaining of his mistreatment.  
 
On of the teacher's disciples, overhearing, takes pity and explains:
 'The Rebbe's slap was given you in great kindness,
 to teach you this:
 
 never surrender a good question for a mere answer.'
 
 
 
 
~ Traditional Hasidic story
 
 
 

Izumi Shikibu


.
.
Watching the moon 
at midnight,
solitary, mid-sky,
I knew myself completely,
no part left out.
.
.
.
I cannot say 
which is which:
the glowing 
plum blossom is
the spring night’s moon.
.
.
.
.
It is true,
the wind blows terribly here -
but moonlight
also leaks between the roof planks
of this ruined house.
.
~ Izumi Shikibu, (974-1034)
.
She is considered by some to be the greatest woman poet of Japanese literature.
from:  Women in Praise of the Sacred, edited by Jane Hirshfield
.

until everything is continuous and whole again


.
.
First, forget what time it is for an hour.
Do it regularly every day.
Then forget what day of the week it is,
and do this regularly in company for a week.
Then forget what country you are in,
and practice doing it in company for a week,
and then do them together for a week
with as few breaks as possible.
Follow these by forgetting how to add
or to subtract.
It makes no difference.
You can change them around after a week.
Both will later help you to forget how to count.
.
Forget how to count,
starting with your own age,
starting with how to count backwards,
starting with even numbers,
with roman numerals,
starting with fractions,
with the old calendar,
going on to the alphabet,
forgetting it all until everything
is continuous and whole again.
.
~  W. S. Merwin
.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Can You Imagine


.
.
For example, what the trees do
not only in lightening storms
or the watery dark of a summer's night
or under the white nets of winter
but now, and now, and now - whenever
we're not looking. Surely you can't imagine
they don't dance, from the root up, wishing
to travel a little, not cramped so much as wanting
a better view, or more sun, or just as avidly
more shade - surely you can't imagine they just
stand there loving every
minute of it, the birds or the emptiness, the dark rings
of the years slowly and without a sound
thickening, and nothing different unless the wind,
and then only in its own mood, comes
to visit, surely you can't imagine
patience, and happiness, like that.
.
~ Mary Oliver 
.
.

"the mind" instead of "my mind"



.
.
Imagine if for the next twenty-four hours you had to wear a cap 
that amplified your thoughts so that everyone 
within a hundred yards of you could hear 
every thought that passed through your head. 
.
Imagine if the mind were broadcast so that 
all about you could overhear your thoughts and fantasies,
 your dreams and fears. 
.
How embarrassed or fearful would you be to go outside? 
.
How long would you let your fear of the mind continue to isolate you from the hearts of others?
.
 And though this experiment sounds like one which few might care to participate in, 
imagine how freeing it would be at last to have nothing to hide.
 And how miraculous it would be to see that all others' minds too 
were filled with the same confusion and fantasies,
 the same insecurity and doubt.
.
 How long would it take the judgmental mind to begin to release its grasp,
 to see through the illusion of separateness,
 to recognize with some humor the craziness of all beings' minds,
 the craziness of mind itself?
.
~ Stephen and Ondrea Levine
.
Who Dies?

 .
reblogged from: http://whiskeyriver.blogspot.com/
.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Bonsai




One morning beginning to notice
which thoughts pull the spirit out of the body, and which return it.
How quietly the abandoned body keens,
like a bonsai maple surrounded by her dropped leaves.
Rain or objects call the forgotten back.
The droplets' placid girth and weight. The table's lack of ambition.
How strange it is that longing, too, becomes a small green bud,
thickening the vacant branch-length in early March.




~ Jane Hirshfield



One Life Is Spent




One life is spent, the other spends us.

Rarely, they touch -
like a cat for the first time meeting itself in a mirror.

In the world, mirrors are few.
The slightest wind dissolves them.

In a life, the moments of recognition are few.

Consciousness does not hate or love, it neither grieves nor longs.
Walking and breathing are not its nature.
It is.

Yet something passes and ends, grows wet in rain and then dries.

and the small bowl of kibble empties into a delicate, spotted paw,
a tail slightly kinked, a preference for one windowsill
over another.




~ Jane Hirshfield



Sunday, May 23, 2010

you are the future


.


You are the future,
the red sky before sunrise
over the fields of time.

You are the cock's crow when night is done,
you are the dew and the bells of matins,
maiden, stranger, mother, death.

You create yourself in ever-changing shapes 
that rise from the stuff of our days---
unsung, unmourned, undescribed,
like a forest we never knew.

You are the deep innerness of all things,
the last word that can never be spoken.
To each of us you reveal yourself differently:
to the ship as coastline, to the shore as a ship.




~ Rainer Maria Rilke
(Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God)


.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

lighthouse




Its vision sweep its one path
like a aged monk raking a garden,
his question long ago answered or moved on.
Far off, night-grazing horses,
breath scented with oat grass and fennel,
step through it, disappear, step through it, disappear.




~ Jane Hirshfield

From Taos to Gallup and Canyon de Chelly


.
.
You still come to me like a fresh lover
Woman of brown and pale pink
I should have left everything for you
should have gone so deep into your heart
I'd get lost in yellow aspen leaves
stand on the straw of your autumn
.
I should never have taken another lover
I should have walked your hills
till my soles burned
till the sky, that old dwarf,
opened its secrets
till someone stopped whispering your name 1,000 miles away
.
~ Natalie Goldberg
painting, Abstract at Ghost Ranch,  by the author
.
.

Into this world


.
.
Let us die gracefully into this world
like a leaf pressed in stone
let us go quietly breathing our last breath
let  the sun continue to revolve in its great golden dance
let us leave it be as it is
and not hold on 
not even to the moon
tipped as it will be tonight 
and beckoning wildly in the sea
.
~ Natalie Goldberg
.

Friday, May 21, 2010

somewhere i have never traveled

.
.


somewhere i have never traveled, gladly beyond
any experience,your eyes have their silence:
in your most frail gesture are things which enclose me,
or which i cannot touch because they are too near
your slightest look easily will enclose me
though i have closed myself as fingers,
you open always petal by petal myself as Spring opens
(touching skilfully,mysteriously)her first rose
or if your wish be to close me,i and
my life will shut very beautifully,suddenly,
as when the heart of this flower imagines
the snow carefully everywhere descending;
nothing which we are to perceive in this world equals
the power of your intense fragility:whose texture
compels me with the colour of its countries,
rendering death and forever with each breathing
(i do not know what it is about you that closes
and opens;only something in me understands
the voice of you eyes is deeper than all roses)
nobody, not even the rain,has such small hands
.
e. e. cummings
.

the simple truth





.
And this is the simple truth - 
that to live is to feel oneself lost. 
He who accepts it has already begun to find himself, 
to be on firm ground. 
Instinctively, as do the shipwrecked, 
he will look around for something to which to cling, 
and that tragic, ruthless glance,
absolutely sincere, 
because it is a question of his salvation,
will cause him to bring order into the chaos of his life. 
These are the only genuine ideas; 
the ideas of the shipwrecked.
All the rest is rhetoric, 
posturing, farce.
.
- Søren Kierkegaard
.