For the Sake of Strangers
A daily poem (Mon-Thur) that I recite for the residents of Center Community of Brookline. Also, occasional pieces about Torah, hearing loss, music, and other topics.
Monday, January 31, 2022
Poem for 1/31/22 - For the Sake of Strangers - by Dorianne Laux
Thursday, January 27, 2022
Poem for 1/27/22 - Thirst by Mary Oliver
THIRST, by Mary Oliver
Another morning and I wake with thirst
for the goodness I do not have. I walk
out to the pond and all the way God has
given us such beautiful lessons. Oh Lord,
I was never a quick scholar but sulked
and hunched over my books past the hour
and the bell; grant me, in your mercy,
a little more time. Love for the earth
and love for you are having such a long
conversation in my heart. Who knows what
will finally happen or where I will be sent,
yet already I have given a great many things
away, expecting to be told to pack nothing,
except the prayers which, with this thirst,
I am slowy learning.
— Mary Oliver, Thirst
Wednesday, January 26, 2022
Poem for 1/26/22 - Walking in Mt. Auburn Cemetery by Richard Fein
I officiated at a funeral this morning at Mount Auburn Cemetery. In my preoccupation with the eulogy and other preparations, I neglected to choose a poem for today's blog. Upon returning home, I found a book of poetry by my friend Richard J. Fein, My Hands Remember, that I had put next to my computer last night, intending to choose a poem. As if by some mystical coincidence, this poem's title appeared in the Table of Contents...
Walking in Mt. Auburn Cemetery by Richard Fein (from My Hands Remember)
1
"You know David Ferry, don't you?"
my wife called ahead to me. I stopped,
turned fearful, yelled back my apotro-
paic fact, "I saw him two days ago
in the Translation Seminar:" Back
at the recess where she waited,
I saw a gray oval stone lipped
just above the ground
and read what the mason incised:
David Ferry
1924-
Anne Ferry
1930-
Those gravid incompletions
roused the stone for me. I bent
and palmed the smooth hue.
Suddenly, I felt embarrassed,
as if I had intruded on an intimate moment.
Two boulders at the head of the plot,
like ocean liners anchored close
to one another near their home port,
formed a channel between themselves.
2
"Well, we meet again," Anne Ferry greets me
as I sit down next to her at Adams House
to hear David read from his new Virgil.
Never going over the top of his lines, but
submitting to them, his voice, in congress
with the words, is delivered clear through
to the end-Orpheus in grief. Severed.
April, 2005
Tuesday, January 25, 2022
Poem for 1/25/22 - The Garden by Moonlight - by Amy Lowell
Monday, January 24, 2022
Poem for 1/24/22 - Yet Do I Marvel - by Countee Cullen
Yet Do I Marvel
Thursday, January 20, 2022
Poem for 1/20/22 - Away, Melancholy - by Stevie Smith
Away, Melancholy
by Stevie Smith (1902-1971)
Away, melancholy,
Away with it, let it go.
Are not the trees green,
The earth as green?
Does not the wind blow,
Fire leap and the rivers flow?
Away melancholy.
The ant is busy
He carrieth his meat,
All things hurry
To be eaten or eat.
Away, melancholy.
Man, too, hurries,
Eats, couples, buries,
He is an animal also
With a hey ho melancholy,
Away with it, let it go.
Man of all creatures
Is superlative
(Away melancholy)
He of all creatures alone
Raiseth a stone
(Away melancholy)
Into the stone, the god
Pours what he knows of good
Calling, good, God.
Away melancholy, let it go.
Speak not to me of tears,
Tyranny, pox, wars,
Saying, Can God
Stone of man's thoughts, be good?
Say rather it is enough
That the stuffed
Stone of man's good, growing,
By man's called God.
Away, melancholy, let it go.
Man aspires
To good,
To love
Sighs;
Beaten, corrupted, dying
In his own blood lying
Yet heaves up an eye above
Cries, Love, love.
It is his virtue needs explaining,
Not his failing.
Away, melancholy,
Away with it, let it go.
Wednesday, January 19, 2022
Poem for 1/19/22 - Where is the Angel for Me to Wrestle - by Denise Levertov
WHERE IS THE ANGEL FOR ME TO WRESTLE?
by Denise Levertov (1923-1997)
No driving snow in the glass bubble,
but mild September.
Outside, the stark shadows
menace, and fling their huge arms about
unheard. I breathe
a tepid air, the blur
of asters, of brown fern and gold-dust
seems to murmur,
and that’s what I hear, only that.
Such clear walls of curved glass:
I see the violent gesticulations
and feel–no, not nothing. But in this
gentle haze, nothing commensurate.
It is pleasant in here. History
mouths, volume turned off. A band of iron,
like they put round a split tree,
circles my heart. In here
it is pleasant, but when I open
my mouth to speak, I too
am soundless. Where is the angel
to wrestle with me and wound
not my thigh but my throat,
so curses and blessings flow storming out
and the glass shatters, and the iron sunders?
Tuesday, January 18, 2022
Poem for 1/18/22 - Meditation in the Open-Air Garage - by Carol Moldaw
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Monday, January 17, 2022
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Thursday, January 13, 2022
Poem for 1/13/22 - Poem About My Rights - by June Jordan
Poem about My Rights
Wednesday, January 12, 2022
Poem for 1/12/22 - Corinthians 13:11 - by Jennifer Martelli
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Tuesday, January 11, 2022
Poems for 1/11/22 - "The Tyger" by William Blake and "Startled Into Life Like Fire" by Charles Bukowski
The Tyger
startled into life like fire
by Charles Bukowski
in grievous deity my cat
walks around
he walks around and around
with
electric tail and
push-button
eyes
he is
alive and
plush and
final as a plum tree
neither of us understands
cathedrals or
the man outside
watering his
lawn
if I were all the man
that he is
cat--
if there were men
like this
the world could
begin
he leaps up on the couch
and walks through
porticoes of my
admiration.