November 25, 2011, 07:06
bethree5Ruth Stone on words
Ruth Stone, US poet from Vermont, poetry professor at SUNY-Binghamton for the last 15 yrs, many awards & honors received in her last decades of life, deceased a few days ago at age 96.
THE TRADE-OFF
Words make the thoughts.
Severe tyrants, like the scrubbers
and guardians of your cells.
They herd your visions
down the ramp to nexus
waiting with sledge hammer
to knock what is the knowing
without knowing into knowledge.
Yes, the tight bag of grammar,
syntax, the clever sidestep
from babble, is a comfortable
prison. A mirror of the mirror.
And all that is uttered in its chains
is locked out from the secret.
WORDS
Wallace Stevens says,
"A poet looks at the world
as a man looks at a woman."
I can never know what a man sees
when he looks at a woman.
That is a sealed universe.
On the outside of the bubble
everything is stretched to infinity.
Along the blacktop, trees are bearded as old men,
like rows of nodding gray-bearded mandarins.
Their secondhand beards were spun by female gypsy moths.
All mandarins are trapped in their images.
A poet looks at the world
as a woman looks at a man.
November 28, 2011, 21:22
KallehOh, those are nice, Bethree! Considering our discussion about prescriptiveness, I like this:
quote:
Yes, the tight bag of grammar,
syntax, the clever sidestep
from babble, is a comfortable
prison. A mirror of the mirror.
And all that is uttered in its chains
is locked out from the secret.
I love "a comfortable prison."