Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Origins of Wednesday viii: the sowing harvest
















We've been out again
  on the backroads,
buying things. Here's
  a permanent harvest:
an apple and four cherries
stenciled on a chair-back,

the arm-wood glowing,
  so human,
from within, where the
  red paint's
been worn away by 
  how many arms
at rest. Polished and
  placed

by the blue table and
  the windows
that frame the back gar-
  den,
it's a true consolation,
necessary, become this

through its own wearing
  away
by use, festive with its
  once-bright
fruit. Anything lived into
  long enough
becomes an orchard.






              I love the brooks 
              which down their 
              channels fret

              Even more than when
              I tripped lightly
              as they




























Mark Doty
My Alexandria
  Poems
  The Wings
T.S. Eliot Prize
1993
op. cit.


William Wordsworth
Intimations of Immortality
  from Recollections of Early
  Childhood
1802
Poetry Foundation, 2014©







No comments:

Post a Comment