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Sunday, May 27, 2012

Your Sunday Poem

From one of my favorite poets, Ted Kooser, from "Delights &Shadows."

Surviving

There are days when the fear of death
is as ubiquitous as light.  It illuminates
everything.  Without it, I might not
have noticed this ladybird beetle,
bright as a drop of blood
on the window's white sill.
Her head no bigger than a period,
her eyes like needle points,
she has stopped for a moment to rest,
knees locked, wing covers hiding
the delicate lace of her wings.
As the fear of death, so attentive
to everything living, comes near her,
the tiny antennae stop moving.

4 comments:

Sewertoons AKA Lynette Tornatzky said...

Another excellent poem from Ted Kooser. Thanks for picking it out for Memorial Day (when death is certainly on my mind anyway).

Alon Perlman said...

Ted; very colloquial and universal. Somewhere in his biography, is noted; “A perfect poet”.
And this is a perfect poem, maybe THE perfect poem. Ladybird beetle’s bright blood, but white is the only stated color. The let blood, and only then the pin point eyes. Certainly the perfect Postcard poem.

But this poem is very personal, maybe more so than for someone who’s first lifeforming external event was being born at the start of the war that ended all wars. It took a while to trace…
“Winter morning walks” published 2000, which you (Chura) selected from before, was about his experience with cancer. Though you explained that on the Blog a while back, I overlooked this in my first search, so ended up at his website which is silent on the subject except for the notes on “publications page”. It is clear that “Delights & Shadows” still carries the Postcard Poems from “Winter morning walks”.
Thanks for sharing Ted with us.

Sparse and richer than a recent brown warhorsian movie.
But if one must have the video to supplant the mind’s eye, Ted reads “Horse”. The first tab top of page, and then on his picture there is a “Play“ button on the webpage…

Horse
In its stall stands the 19th century,
its hide a hot shudder of satin,
head stony and willful,
an eye brown as a river and watchful:
a sentry a long way ahead
of a hard, dirty army of hooves.

Churadogs said...

Re: The horse poem, I thought about posting that one. It's quite an amazing poem when you think about it.
And, yes, Ted did have a book of poems,"Winter Morning Walks: One Hundred Postcards to Jim Harrison," small haiku-like poems he wrote while taking morning walks while recovering from cancer treatments. They're lovely. And Kooser's an extraordinary poet. (He also wrote a momoir, "Lignts on a ground of Darkness," which is beautiful.

All of his works are available in paperback so I hope you all will go buy some of them. They're worth having and re-reading.

Malloryxmnn said...

Ted; very colloquial and universal. Somewhere in his biography, is noted; “A perfect poet”. And this is a perfect poem, maybe THE perfect poem. Ladybird beetle’s bright blood, but white is the only stated color. The let blood, and only then the pin point eyes. Certainly the perfect Postcard poem. But this poem is very personal, maybe more so than for someone who’s first lifeforming external event was being born at the start of the war that ended all wars. It took a while to trace… “Winter morning walks” published 2000, which you (Chura) selected from before, was about his experience with cancer. Though you explained that on the Blog a while back , I overlooked this in my first search, so ended up at his website which is silent on the subject except for the notes on “publications page”. It is clear that “Delights & Shadows” still carries the Postcard Poems from “Winter morning walks”. Thanks for sharing Ted with us. Sparse and richer than a recent brown warhorsian movie. But if one must have the video to supplant the mind’s eye, Ted reads “Horse”. The first tab top of page, and then on his picture there is a “Play“ button on the webpage… Horse In its stall stands the 19th century, its hide a hot shudder of satin, head stony and willful, an eye brown as a river and watchful: a sentry a long way ahead of a hard, dirty army of hooves.