A summer situation and love such a sensible surprise strawberries on a plate roses in a vase a table laden with welcome guests amid air that circulates lung to lung
Sweet summer palpable sensation risen temperatures and an eye calibrated for beauty : dainty black slippers and white lace A day less weary hair winnowed in the nightbreeze Moonlight streams through open windows gilds the silver spoons A stroll in the park is never an accident
Time and decay nothing lasts a single rosebud a thorn in the side nothing lasts Sentences that creak to the very end – full-stop Clutch at straws in a howling gale sooner than trap time
There in the churchyard bones gone to dust stones gone to dust names of wife and husband mother and lover and son and daughter all gone to dust the limestone cracks the letters peel nothing to be read of the mason’s craft weathered away – time reduced to rubble
Yet there in the caves walls daubed with the bright blood of berries a vivid remembrance to celebrate the hunt and the life lived for and in the moment gathered under a single roof to share their time— that which never lasts except perhaps in creation and in acts of love
A single rosebud : and a swallow swoops and is gone like François Villon
And love— love is so rare but it’s all that’s left
This fine leafmeal tossed in the air by the wild west wind will sooner or later settle into the dust the dust of all things from which all things arise
He is gone against the grain but gone albeit willingly departed leaving us to mourn his passing on this harrowed midwinter night that howls at my window with such a vengeance
He was a boy a man a husband then. . . now gone to dust to mingle with the ash of dandelion to dwell in that other place where no winds blow
See where the damselfly roosts above the thorny wetlands where the kingfishers hunt : there flows a river out of Eden
Out of Eden out of place out of time out of the unawakened earth but in our hearts always
A fading blue sky piled high with clouds but backed by a red glow a promise of days to come and down by the railway shadows gathering in the tall oaks where birds are straining their throats in evensong
I think of the dear dead days my father in the lounge listening to John McCormack on the old gramophone Just a song at twilight and the dreams that rose out of his heart that wove themselves into our lives as children the flickering gleam of the firelight and his gentle reflection caught in the gold-framed mirror his smile unabashed Sundays when he would sit at the piano and sing to my mother one of love’s sweet songs with delicate notes at his fingertips enraptured but neither sad nor weary
And as the train pulls in with the ear-piercing grind of steel on steel I note how the chorus from the trees has grown in volume as though the birds in the ensemble are quite decided that they will under no circumstances be outsung
Measure and the shape of things to come as seen in the glass the slow advance of years how time sneaks up and gets in under the skin patches of rust around the ankles a stiffness in the joints in need of a little lubrication
No the stars are not numberless each and every one as blades of grass or sparrows in the field accounted for and so too the flesh records it all the aches and pains of ageing the sedimentation the laying down of experiences year on year and the subtle changes
Ambition has had its day and left no laurels to rest upon optimism has been sorely tested but hope springs eternally as they say and so an accommodation to the realities is in order If only wisdom were par for the course what a wise world it would be
Neither the gentleness of your breath nor the softness of your skin should go unsung nor the mystery in your eyes at the low and splendid rising of the moon
Five planets perfectly aligned at daybreak should cause no greater stir than your smile your curved lips at a tangent your heart pressed against my heart
I brush your hair away from your temple and beneath my fingers feel the warm flutter of your pulse I stroke your cheek hold in my arms the flesh shaped from the flesh of stars though none ever shone more brightly than you
This sky that stretches away from the earth is our portal into the heavens whence we came and where we belong
The American poet, Cid Corman (1924-2004), a translator and founder and editor of the literary magazine Origin, was a key figure in the history of American poetry in the second half of the 20th century. Corman lived for much of his adult life in Japan and maintained his friendship with Louis Zukofsky and Lorine Niedecker, among many others, through extensive correspondence.
A prolific writer, the influence of Japanese poetry is evident throughout his work. Introducing a volume of his poetry entitled Word for Each Other (1967), Corman wrote: “Something in them, in the sounded meanings joined here, should feed something in you that merits sharing—a little life that feels beyond itself, the dying implied in every word, in every thing, in every legend man has devised, in ache in ache in ache, invoking the only judgment man is worthy of: love.”
The Kindness
the man dying loved red roses like those he grew
you looked for some everywhere in the city
and finally brought him the best carefully so
he shouldn’t know you picked them from his own garden
Bone by infant bone we live it out in the moment dragging our conscript dust from place to place each daily numbered one rush spliced into the other permitting merely the briefest foxtrot of recollection until in restless nightsleep the day’s untidy dealings are unravelled
The miniature rings she wore about her neck the cold dry sand accumulated in the gutter the rapture of dawn to dusk Who heard the pounding sea that day ? Who saw the sun trace its weary arc in the molten sky ? These are the perennials breath and the heartbeat within the singing cathedral the rise and fall of it all as the moon wanes and the years draw on Whatever dice you cast the ciphers are known and the flesh recalls every fibre of flesh it ever touched in tender admiration just as the journey of every tear you ever cried is recorded in the journals of sorrow and dismay every moan ever uttered consoled or unconsoled
In the flat fields where hops rise and fall or where sheep in unwitting innocence graze the land there is our paradise if only we knew Time is our probation our trial and our error : pale pearls will outlive us both life does not abate nor unsated love even when it is driven deep into the ground
Out of words a life made out of words words that bind us to the people and the things around us and within us words transformed into actions actions transformed into words in the beginning was the word was consciousness of the world the word-world : the sounds are immaterial by any other name love shines through as does the rose or the beauty of the hummingbird no bigger than a thumb that flits back and forth supping nectar from the bright blooms the warm air vibrating from the buzz of its wings
How insatiable is life and love – and appetite is a glorious virtue Time and the world are ever in flight but the word is bedrock my word is my bond and even as the stars dwindle above the chimney pots on Doughty Street I will love you to the ends of the universe you have my word