Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Poems of the Day

Two I liked. Both about man's dread of nature.

The first is by Connecticut poet (and NEA/Guggenheim Grant recipient) Russell Edson, who specializes in the kind of surreal dark humor you see here:

The Difficulty with a Tree by Russell Edson
 
A woman was fighting a tree. The tree had come to rage at the woman’s attack, breaking free from its earth it waddled at her with its great root feet.
         Goddamn these sentiencies, roared the tree with birds shrieking in its branches.
         Look out, you’ll fall on me, you bastard, screamed the woman as she hit at the tree.
         The tree whisked and whisked with its leafy branches.
         The woman kicked and bit screaming, kill me kill me or I’ll kill you!

         Her husband seeing the commotion came running crying, what tree has lost patience?
         The ax the ax, damnfool, the ax, she screamed.
         Oh no, roared the tree dragging its long roots rhythmically limping like a sea lion towards her husband.
         But oughtn’t we to talk about this? cried her husband.
         But oughtn’t we to talk about this, mimicked his wife.
         But what is this all about? he cried.
         When you see me killing something you should reason that it will want to kill me back, she screamed.

         But before her husband could decide what next action to perform the tree had killed both the wife and her husband.
         Before the woman died she screamed, now do you see?
         He said, what...? And then he died.
 
Should I be rooting for the tree? This is all J.R.R. Tolkien's doing.
 
The second one is by Jane Hirschfield, who is also an essayist and translator of Japanese poetry. It says she was a graduate of Princeton's first class to include women in 1973. (wait-1973? Apparently, yes. They first admitted women in 1969. Jive Ivy League motherfuckers.) Anyways, no humor here but there is a still a dread of nature.
 
Tree by Jane Hirshfield
 
It is foolish
to let a young redwood   
grow next to a house.

Even in this   
one lifetime,
you will have to choose.

That great calm being,
this clutter of soup pots and books—

Already the first branch-tips brush at the window.   
Softly, calmly, immensity taps at your life.

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