Tuesday 30 July 2013

Garlic Planting Time by Helen Lehndorf



Mary

Megan



There has not been much to recommend the future lately,
but still you go outside in gumboots, three layers of wool,
the rhythms of the garden offering solace.
Under dark hills that are not the mountain
you were born under, you prepare the beds
for the shortest day. Preventative medicine.
You stoop, claw at the earth
digging over the dirt, raking in
sheep manure and comfrey tea.
You hope to grow enough for a whole year. It
will hang in plaits around the garage, drying
in the warm summer air, warding off colds and evil spirits.
Have you noticed how there is a lull in the cold,
before it rains? It gets a little warmer. This is
what to look for – small breaks in the weather. Breathers.
When a friend brings you cloves
of new varieties: silverskin, purple stripe –
you cradle them like a papery currency, rustling gift.
This is storing and healing. This is
planning and tending. With muddy fists,
you take possession of the year.





Sunday 21 July 2013

Canticle of Clouds by Jennifer Atkinson


Megan

Mary

Stratus—stuff and nonsense;

                                           how things tear and frazzle;
A happenstance of riffle and spume; dust and diaspora; in short, the long view.



Cirrus—easy come;
                              how things tendril, spindle, and tuft;
The ice- and milt-stippled current; a sigh; the intervention of drift.



Contrail—a stitch in time;
                                       how things linger and fade;
Legato passage, the having been; seam in the collateral damask.



Cumulus—two heads are better;
                                               how things swell and rush
To judgment; the hurly-burly of Moe and Larry; magisterial pomp, pratfallen.



Nimbus—see no, speak no evil;
                                              how things brim and spill;
Part and whole; the unmarked field over a field; pure radiance put to use.



Sunday 14 July 2013

Traveller, There Is No Path by Antonio Machado

Mary


Megan

Everything passes on and everything remains,
But our lot is to pass on,
To go on making paths,
Paths across the sea.

I never sought glory,
Nor to leave my song
In the memory of man;
I love those subtle worlds,
Weightless and graceful,
As bubbles of soap.

I like to watch as they paint themselves
In sunlight and scarlet, floating
Beneath the blue sky, trembling
Suddenly then popping…

I never sought glory.

Traveller, your footprints
Are the path and nothing more;
Traveller, there is no path,
The path is made by walking.

By walking the path is made
And when you look back
You'll see a road
Never to be trodden again.

Traveller, there is no path,
Only trails across the sea…

Some time past in that place
Where today the forests are dressed in barbs
A poet was heard to cry
"Traveller, there is no path,
The path is made by walking…"

Beat by beat, verse by verse…

The poet died far from home.
He lies beneath the dust of a neighbouring land.
As he walked away he was seen to weep.
"Traveller, there is no path,
The path is made by walking…"

Beat by beat, verse by verse…

When the goldfinch cannot sing,
When the poet is a pilgrim,
When prayer will do us no good.
"Traveller, there is no path,
The path is made by walking…"

Beat by beat, verse by verse.




Sunday 7 July 2013

Butterfly with Parachute by Stephen Burt

Mary

A real one wouldn't need one, 
but the one Nathan draws surely does: 
four oblongs the size and color of popsicles, 
green apple, toasted coconut and grape, 
flanked, two per side, by billowing valentine hearts, 
in a frame of Scotch tape. 
Alive, it could stay off the floor 
for a few unaerodynamic minutes; 
thrown as a paper airplane, for a few more.

Very sensibly, therefore, 
our son gave it something, not to keep it apart 
from the ground forever, but rather to make safe its
descent.  When we ask that imagination discover the limits
of the real 
world only slowly, 
maybe this is what we meant.