Question of the Day | 07/24/2008 12:00 am
In celebration of Kay Ryan's appointment as the 16th Poet Laureate, tell us: What is your favorite poem of all time?

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It is the season
of divorce.
February ends
abruptly.
Oak trees which have fiercely
held their leaves
all winter
suddenly
let go.
Our friends
tear apart.
We married so young
I think of pictures
of Asian princes
bethrothed at five,
their enormous eyes
accepting anything.
In the woods
dog nose among emptied burrows,
bark at the silence.
Don’t leave now.
We have almost
survived
our lives.
Twenty or so years ago when the world was so full of emotions unspilled, I am guessing the typed pages that flowed on and on were what was in my heart. Funny … they all hold true and bring tears today.
I hope you don’t mind if I add a poem - one rarely written about - but one that all women with children will relate to in a way that may not have been written before. Full of imagery, I hope, and truth — and love.
Strapped down,
victim in an old comic book,
I have been here before,
this place where pain winces
off the walls like too bright light
Bear down a doctor says,
foreman to a sweating laborer,
but this work, this forcing
of one life from another
is something I signed for
at a moment when I would have signed anything.
Babies should grow in fields;
common as beets and turnips
they should be picked and held
root end up, soil spilling
from between their toes -
and how much easier it would be later,
returning to earth.
Bear up … bear down … the audience
grows restive, and I’m a magician
who can’t produce a rabbit
from my swollen hat.
She’s crowning, someone says,
but there is no one royal here,
just me, quite barefoot,
greeting my barefoot child.
*
joan, thanks for sharing that most beautiful poem.
I love poetry’s economy of words… the vivid imagery that reaches deep into the soul.
I agree. It is too hard to name just one. I’m fortunate to have been exposed to poetry at a very early age. So many poems, so little time…

On such a night as this
When no moon lights your way to me,
I wake, my passion blazing,
My breast a fire raging, exploding flame
While within me my heart chars.
Ono no Komachi 834 - ??
And these by Izumi Shikibu 974 - 1034:
Why haven’t I
thought of it before?
This body,
remembering yours
is the keepsake you left.
And this one:
Lying alone
my black hair tangled,
uncombed,
I long for the one
who touched it first.
We don’t know her first name, only her last and her father’s court title, shikibu—she lived like Ono No Komachi in Heian Japan and is Japan’s greatest woman poet.
How can one have only one favourite poem?
HAN WUTI–––ON THE DEATH OF HIS MISTRESS
The sound of her silk skirt has stopped.
On the marble pavement dust grows.
Her empty room is cold and still.
Fallen leaves are piled against the doors.
Longing for a lovely lady
How can I bring my aching heart to rest?

And just one more: It’s by Nizar Qabbani a Lebanese poet much revered in the Arabic world; this is to his wife Balqis who died too young:
In the blue harbour of your eyes
Snow falls in July.
Ships laden with turquoise
Spill over the sea and are not drowned.
In the blue harbor of your eyes
I run on the scattered rocks like a child
Breathing the fragrance of the sea
And return an exhausted bird.
In the blue harbor of your eyes
Stones sing in the night.
Who has hidden a thousand poems
In the closed book of your eyes?
If only, if only I were a sailor,
If only somebody’d give me a boat,
I would furl my sails each evening
In the blue harbour of your eyes.
Definitely Rilke. From the “Archaic Torso of Apollo.” The last two lines left me in awe when I was an impressionable student, and I love them still.
We cannot know his legendary head
with eyes like ripening fruit. And yet his torso
is still suffused with brilliance from inside,
like a lamp, in which his gaze, now turned to low,
gleams in all its power. Otherwise
the curved breast could not dazzle you so, nor could
a smile run through the placid hips and thighs
to that dark center where procreation flared.
Otherwise this stone would seem defaced
beneath the translucent cascade of the shoulders
and would not glisten like a wild beast’s fur:
would not, from all the borders of itself,
burst like a star: for here there is no place
that does not see you. You must change your life.
******************
“Here there is no place that does not see you. You must change your life.”
I love those lines. That and “This is the land they call life. You will recognize it by its seriousness.”

Ki: I love that: Thank you so much :-) He wrote this too that resonates for me always:
For one human being to love another is perhaps the most difficult task of all, the epitome, the ultimate test. It is that striving for which all other striving is merely preparation.
Rainier Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet

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