Tuesday 26 January 2016

Tuesday Poem: "Day in the life of" by Avie Williams



Can you help
pick some flowers

for the children and

bury a blackbird.

There's a dead rat outside

can you hurry

they are starting to poke

its eyes out with pencils.

Can you fix the door

it's got a dent in it

there's blood on the carpet

and a pile of sick next door

they are screaming as

they've just seen

what he had for breakfast this morning.

There's a pair of furry bunny ears down the toilet.

The window is cracked and

the toilets are flooded

someone stuck toilet paper and

blocked up the sink.

The newly planted trees

have been stripped bare

the leaves are in a circle of stones

baking in the sun with mud pies.

Are  you able to rescue a pair of scissors out of the tree before it takes someone's eye out.

He's lost a brand new shoe on the roof today

wait until his Mother finds out

she won't be happy.



by Avie Williams


This is a more unusual post in that you may not have heard of this poet, but we don't always have to read the work of those "great poets" who have been showered with accolades and anthologised all over the place.


This is a poem for the everyday, but none the less marvellous for that. This was brought to my attention by a poetry-loving friend.


Avie Williams works as the caretaker at Island Bay School in the southern seaside suburb of Island Bay, Wellington, New Zealand.


More of his work can be found at his blog here:


http://aviescribblings.blogspot.co.nz/

Tuesday 19 January 2016

Tuesday Poem: "What the Angels Left" by Marie Howe



At first, the scissors seemed perfectly harmless.
They lay on the kitchen table in the blue light.


Then I began to notice them all over the house,

at night in the pantry, or filling up bowls in the cellar


where there should have been apples. They appeared under rugs,

lumpy places where one would usually settle before the fire,


or suddenly shining in the sink at the bottom of soupy water.

Once, I found a pair in the garden, stuck in turned dirt


among the new bulbs, and one night, under my pillow,

I felt something like a cool long tooth and pulled them out


to lie next to me in the dark. Soon after that I began

to collect them, filling boxes, old shopping bags,


every suitcase I owned. I grew slightly uncomfortable

when company came. What if someone noticed them


when looking for forks or replacing dried dishes? I longed

to throw them out, but how could I get rid of something


that felt oddly like grace? It occurred to me finally

that I was meant to use them, and I resisted a growing compulsion


to cut my hair, although in moments of great distraction,

I thought it was my eyes they wanted, or my soft belly


—exhausted, in winter, I laid them out on the lawn.

The snow fell quite as usual, without any apparent hesitation


or discomfort. In spring, as expected, they were gone.

In their place, a slight metallic smell, and the dear muddy earth.



by Marie Howe 



For more information about poet, Marie Howe, see:


http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/marie-howe

Tuesday 12 January 2016

Tuesday Poem: "Paired Things" by Kay Ryan



Who, who had only seen wings,
could extrapolate the

skinny sticks of things

birds use for land,

the backward way they bend,

the silly way they stand?

And who, only studying

birdtracks in the sand,

could think those little forks

had decamped on the wind?

So many paired things seem odd.

Who ever would have dreamed

the broad winged raven of despair

would quit the air and go

bandylegged upon the ground,

a common crow?



by Kay Ryan

For more on the poet, Kay Ryan, see:


http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/kay-ryan

Tuesday 5 January 2016

Tuesday Poem: "Ravens Hiding in a Shoe" by Robert Bly


There is something men and women living in houses
Don’t understand. The old alchemists standing
Near their stoves hinted at it a thousand times.

Ravens at night hide in an old woman’s shoe.
A four-year-old speaks some ancient language.
We have lived our own death a thousand times.

Each sentence we speak to friends means the opposite
As well. Each time we say, “I trust in God,” it means
God has already abandoned us a thousand times.

Mothers again and again have knelt in church
In wartime asking God to protect their sons,
And their prayers were refused a thousand times.

The baby loon follows the mother’s sleek
Body for months. By the end of summer, she
Has dipped her head into Rainy Lake a thousand times.

Robert, you’ve wasted so much of your life
Sitting indoors to write poems. Would you
Do that again? I would, a thousand times.



by Robert Bly




For more information about the poet, Robert Bly, see:


http://robertbly.com/