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Good Poem I Just Read

 
 
iconoplast
11:39 / 12.01.03
“Lines Composed Over Three Thousand Miles from Tintern Abbey”
 
I was here before, a long time ago,
and now I am here again
is an observation that occurs in poetry
as frequently as rain occurs in life.
 
The fellow may be gazing
over an English landscape,
hillsides dotted with sheep,
a row of tall trees topping the downs,
 
or he could be moping through the shadows
of a dark Bavarian forest,
a wedge of cheese and a volume of fairy tales
tucked into his rucksack.
 
But the feeling is always the same.
It was better the first time.
This time is not nearly as good.
I'm not feeling as chipper as I did back then.
 
Something is always missing—
swans, a glint on the surface of a lake,
some minor but essential touch.
Or the quality of things has diminished.
 
The sky was a deeper, more dimensional blue,
clouds were more cathedral-like,
and water rushed over rock
with greater effervescence.
 
From our chairs we have watched
the poor author in his waistcoat
as he recalls the dizzying icebergs of childhood
and mills around in a field of weeds.
 
 
We have heard the poets long dead
declaim their dying
from a promontory, a riverbank,
next to a haycock, within a copse.
 
We have listened to their dismay,
the kind that issues from poems
the way water issues forth from hoses,
the way the match always gives its little speech on fire.
 
And when we put down the book at last,
lean back, close our eyes,
stinging with print,
and slip in the bookmark of sleep,
 
we will be schooled enough to know
that when we wake up
a little before dinner
things will not be nearly as good as they once were.
 
Something will be missing
from this long, coffin-shaped room,
the walls and windows now
only two different shades of gray,
 
the glossy gardenia drooping
in its chipped terra-cotta pot.
And on the floor, shoes, socks,
the browning core of an apple.
 
Nothing will be as it was
a few hours ago, back in the glorious past
before our naps, back in that Golden Age
that drew to a close sometime shortly after lunch.

--Billy Collins
 
 
Mourne Kransky
12:14 / 12.01.03
Liked that Golden Age
that drew to a close sometime shortly after lunch
.

Never heard of the guy but now I have. Thanks, iconoplast.
 
 
The Apple-Picker
12:30 / 12.01.03
That is a good one. Billy Collins is amazing, and I love him. He has such a good sense of humor. If you or anyone else wants to read some more of his work that's available online, you can go here.
 
 
pointless and uncalled for
12:48 / 12.01.03
On the bus today.

Love without hope, as when the young bird-catcher
Swept off his tall hat to the Squire's own daughter,
So let the imprisoned larks escape and fly
Singing about her head, as she rode by.

Simple is beuatiful as always.
 
 
The Falcon
13:53 / 12.01.03
That's a reference to miserabilist classic 'Lines Composed Over Tintern Abbey' by Phillip Larkin.

Excellent stuff.

I believe it contains the line 'A serious house on serious earth', trainspotters.
 
 
Kit-Cat Club
10:35 / 13.01.03
That's a reference to miserabilist classic 'Lines Composed Over Tintern Abbey' by Phillip Larkin.

[cough]Wordsworth[cough]...
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
11:56 / 13.01.03
"A serious house on serious Earth it is" is the first line of the last stanza of "Church Going", by Larkin.

That's a bit long to get into a cough, isn't it?
 
 
The Falcon
15:22 / 13.01.03
Cock.

I'm a fucking idiot.

I was thinking of Larkin for some reason.

My face is puce.
 
 
that
15:29 / 13.01.03
potus: I love that poem - very beautiful and sad.

Here's another from the buses that I really like:

LIKE A BEACON - Grace Nichols

In London
every now and then
I get this craving
for my mother's food
I leave art galleries
in search of plantains
saltfish/sweet potatoes

I need this link

I need this touch
of home
swinging my bag
like a beacon
against the cold
 
 
The Apple-Picker
23:10 / 13.01.03
Cock.

I'm a fucking idiot.

I was thinking of Larkin for some reason.

My face is puce.


Hahaha! I thought you were joking--I didn't want to make a killjoy correction.
 
 
The Falcon
12:42 / 14.01.03
Unfortunately not; but, you know, 'Church Going', 'Lines Composed Over Tintern Abbey', the fact I hatehatehate Wordsworth and have erased him from my brain...

It all adds up.
 
  
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