Authors: Ursula K. Le Guin
What opens day's eye slowly to the
Spring?
Sun-tiger. Solstice wheel.
Vast holy engines of violet and willow.
The planet in the pale sky.
Aloof and noble, the great buttes
rear up their rimrock, let
their slopes slide motionlessly down
in the necessary curve from heaven.
Some ruthlessness befits old age.
Tender young herbs are generous and pliant,
but in dry solitudes the grey-leaved sage
stands unforthcoming and defiant.
I walked by the sea-creek side.
The wind laughed, the gulls cried.
Sweet water lapped on salt sand
between the deep sea and the deep land.
The lionesses of the mind are dangerous.
Big sinuous dun bodies range
the plains of sleep. The fangs are sharp.
The fire-yellow eyes fix on my heart.
Untongued I turn to still
forgetting all I will.
Light lies the shadow
on the way I go.
The bell in Iera
No mercy was in that Tuscan bell.
The hard discordant fist of sound
struck each small hourâpausedâstruck again
in the stone silence of the mountain town.
The trains in Portland
Greedy of sleep, the city has decreed
the grand, companionable travellers must be dumb,
distance and darkness desolate of those voices
crying at far crossings,
I come, I come
.
The owls in Forest Park
On the remotest edge of hearing,
like the first star uncertain to the eye,
a small trill trembling in tree-shadows.
The wait. The fainter yet reply.
Andromache if you'd known
of the ragged carrion thing
to be dragged round day
after day the walls of Troy
by order of Achilles and had seen
yourself in shame on some gaunt
Greek island Pyrrhus' slave
when in the windy sunlight
with you Hector laughing on the battlement
lifted up your little son
soon to be thrown to death
from that high wall by order of Ulysses
and the child frightened
by his father's helmet cried a little
and you laughed again together
in that moment if you'd known
all as we who read Homer know it
what would you have done differently?
The crowds that cheered me when I took the Gold,
who were they then? Where are they now?
It's queer to think about. Do they know how
you look at the hurdles, long before you're old,
and wonder how you ever ran that race?
I'm not sorry, now all's said and done,
to lie here by myself with nowhere to run,
in quiet, in this immense dark place.
Let me go out and in the door
of your great hall,
serve in your kitchen, sweep your floor.
Old as I am, let me before
I get too old to work at all,
work for you a little more.
As in the past, by owning me
you set me free.
Command my whole obedience,
use my little strength and sense
to shape the end I do not see,
your mystery, my recompense.
i. Dickens' Hard Times
“Girl Number Twenty, define a horse.”
But Cissie the circus rider
can't say what a horse is
to the schoolmaster so blinded by abstractions
he can't see a horse.
ii. Delacroix's Drawing
This line of ink isn't around the horse.
It ropes and bridles a certain
thing seen from a certain angle
on a piece of paper, once.
Something's caught but nothing's kept.
iii. Judith's Fear of Naming
She fears that definition will destroy
the secret thingness of the thing,
as if a dictionary could contain
the rhythmic hooves, the nostril widening,
the great hard-beating heart.
To define's not to confine,
words can't reach so far.
Even the poet's line can only hold
a moment of the uncontainable.
The horse runs free.
Dreadful, this death, dragging
so many lives and lively minds along
after it into unmeaning,
endless, imbecile silence.
The more ways there are to say Mother
the wiser the world is.
Never are there enough
words for Well done! or Welcome!
A line of verse revives lost Aprils.
In the name for Home lie whole nations.
The unused word may be the useful one.
Old nouns are in no hurry.
Old verbs are very patient.
The water of life is learning.
May elders ever tell the mythic origins
in the almost-lost old language
to children cheated of knowledge
of their own holy inheritance.
May myopic scholars scowl
forever at fragments of inscription,
so that the young may yawn
long over grim grammars, learning
to speak the tongues unspoken
and hear a human music otherwise unheard.
This big one is called “Mountain Silence,”
but it's the one beyond it, “The Sierra
Divide,” that holds silence
the way a grey stone bowl holds water.
Looking into the painting
I think how it is itself
silent. How we move in silence
among these painted skies and mountains.
How the charity of a painting,
its gift I will carry out of the museum,
may be its silence,
full and quiet as a bowl of water,
that I can hold later in my soul's hands
and look into and see how light falls on granite.
Since keeping house and raising kids
don't count as jobs, I only ever had one.
I started out as a prentice
at five years old, and at near eighty-five
in most ways I still am one,
being a slow learner. And the work
is quite demanding.
The boss who drives the shiny yellow car
and those nine sisters up there by the spring
are tough, but fair. There's times
you can't get them to listen,
but they've always got their eye on you.
They don't let botched work pass.
Sometimes the pay is terrible.
Sometimes it's only fairy gold.
Then again sometimes the wages
are beyond imagination and desire.
I am glad to have worked for this company.
An eagle anger with a broken wing
struggles inside my body and strikes blind
to break the iron bars with iron beak.
Far too late now for cure or soft healing.
To such deep injury no hand is kind.
Within me is the way the bird must take,
in this cage all the sky she can attain,
the wide, clear, patient silence of the mind
where flight goes far and fierce thought can forsake
words and seek distances out past all pain,
ache, and heartache.
July, August
high over the uplands of summer evening gold stretches on long after Venus has followed the sun down
and the silver of Vega is only longing and guesswork till always it seems all at once the bright wings
shine out to carry the Swan in silence across the river of midnight to the warm dim shore where the first
bird
will speak
November, December
down from
the high
hill of Fall
a road goes
through dark
to cold
past a ring of great grey-shouldered stones that keep the secret of the moment when the unseen sun
stops
and turns
A slight, white drift
of high mist down the river
and all blue goes grey.
The sun turns silver.
Summer's honey drains away.
Dry cottonwoods shiver.
Three-quarter moon outshines
stars around her, slides
west to the tide rising,
cold, cold and wild.
October's last night goes
lone to the day of souls,
a ghost on a north wind blowing
wild, wild and cold.
Between the acts, the interval.
The leaves were late to fall, this fall.
Between the verdict and the doom,
a whisper in the waiting-room.
A non-event between events
holding a secret and a sense.
A winter wind just whispers where
two winter trees stand tense and bare.
Ashland, Oregon, 2014
On August thirtieth
on the deck above the deck
above the little leaf-hidden river
where old raddled hippies
smoke pot and shout fuck at each other
in the small city
that thrives on Shakespeare's language
in the late evening
of the late summer
of the late, late age we've come to
I sit and hear the crickets chorusing
and a far crow caw
and I want to write a poem
that says late twilight
and the very end of August,
my golden August,
and all summer
and I guess I've written it.
No not quite yet.
Here:
wind of the end
of summer, wind
of the end of day
softly
play
in the leaves, in the many
leaves
softly softly
from all the air
gather, evening,
everywhere
The form is from Goethe's “Nachtgesang.”
I sought a newer music,
but it rang false and wrong.
I'd find a tune and lose it,
hearing an older song.
I'd find a tune and lose it,
and always, all day long,
among my thoughts and doings
half heard some older song.
Among my thoughts and doings
a tune would ring out strong,
yet change when I pursued it,
lost in that older song.
The tunes of my own choosing
all sounded false and wrong.
I sought a newer music,
I found an older song.
In Alice's wood where things forgot their names
and fawn and child walked together fearless,
a stone might flower, a spring burst into flames,
a heavy human soul go light and careless.
But through the forest of the failing mind
where words decay like leaves, and paths long trodden
are lost, the soul plods onward to no end,
fawns, children, flowers, flames forgotten.
words for a country song
Coming down the cloudy side
leaving the bright behind us
isn't any place to hide
where the rain won't find us
Driving down so low so fast
all the sunlight in the past
Coming down the cloudy side
to another weather
got to be a place to hide
and try to stay together
The world looks so cold and wide
coming down the cloudy side
Come with me my sorrow
come away with me
where the road grows narrow
westward to the sea
where the waters darken
slow as evening falls
where no winds waken