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peace, love, happiness & understanding 3/18/21
March 18, 2021 - March 31, 2021
Daphne odora
THE OPEN ROAD
peace, love, happiness & understanding
Spring Equinox
March 18, 2021
Kristen Sagan sent this poem just in time for our Annual Spring Issue!:
A Color of the Sky
Windy today and I feel less than brilliant,
driving over the hills from work.
There are the dark parts on the road
when you pass through clumps of wood
and the bright spots where you have a view of the ocean,
but that doesn’t make the road an allegory.
I should call Marie and apologize
for being so boring at dinner last night,
but can I really promise not to be that way again?
And anyway, I’d rather watch the trees, tossing
in what certainly looks like sexual arousal.
Otherwise it’s spring, and everything looks frail;
the sky is baby blue, and the just-unfurling leaves
are full of infant chlorophyll,
the very tint of inexperience.
Last summer’s song is making a comeback on the radio,
and on the highway overpass,
the only metaphysical vandal in America has written
MEMORY LOVES TIME
in big black spraypaint letters,
which makes us wonder if Time loves Memory back.
Last night I dreamed of X again.
She’s like a stain on my subconscious sheets.
Years ago she penetrated me
but though I scrubbed and scrubbed and scrubbed,
I never got her out,
but now I’m glad.
What I thought was an end turned out to be a middle.
What I thought was a brick wall turned out to be a tunnel.
What I thought was an injustice
turned out to be a color of the sky.
Outside the youth center, between the liquor store
and the police station,
a little dogwood tree is losing its mind;
overflowing with blossomfoam,
like a sudsy mug of beer;
like a bride ripping off her clothes,
dropping snow white petals to the ground in clouds,
so Nature’s wastefulness seems quietly obscene.
It’s been doing that all week:
making beauty,
and throwing it away,
and making more.
—Tony Hoagland (1953-2018)
*
Kim sent this:
Oregon Dawn in Spite of the News
Before I can get to our statistics—so many
stricken, so many dead—I’m summoned
by the birds raising a ruckus outside, crows
and jays in festive outrage, trill, chirrr, and aria
from the little brown birds, the mournful
dove, the querulous towhee, rusty starlings
in their see-saw mutter, and a woodpecker
flicker hammering the gutter staccato.
On the porch, I’m assaulted by the merciless
scent of trees opening their million flowers,
as I inhale the deep elixir of hazel, hawthorn,
maple, and oh those shameless cherry trees.
And just when I’ve almost recovered
my serious moment, I gasp, helpless to see
the full queen moon sidling down
through a haze of blossoms.
—Kim Stafford
*
E. E. Cummings has so many poems of spring springing. In this one we can remember our youth and the joy of suddenly sunny play days and school letting out:
in Just-
spring when the world is mud-
luscious the little
lame balloonman
whistles far and wee
and eddieandbill come
running from marbles and
piracies and it’s
spring
when the world is puddle-wonderful
the queer
old balloonman whistles
far and wee
and bettyandisbel come dancing
from hop-scotch and jump-rope and
it’s
spring
and
the
goat-footed
balloonMan whistles
far
and
wee
May you know peace and well being this weekend on the spring equinox when things are in balance in the cosmos and the rain and the sun are in concert with one another.
—Love, Katie
*
O sweet spontaneous
earth how often have
the
doting
fingers of
prurient philosophers pinched
and
poked
thee
,has the naughty thumb
of science prodded
thy
beauty .how
often have religions taken
thee upon their scraggy knees
squeezing and
buffeting thee that thou mightest conceive
gods
(but
true
to the incomparable
couch of death thy
rhythmic
lover
thou answerest
them only with
spring)
—e e cummings, published in The Dial, May 1920.
*
Spring, the sweete spring, is the yeres pleasant King,
Then bloomes eche thing, then maydes daunce in a ring,
Cold doeth not sting, the pretty birds doe sing,
Cuckow, jugge, jugge, pu we, to witta woo.
The Palme and May make countrey houses gay,
Lambs friske and play, the Shepherds pype all day,
And we heare aye birds tune this merry lay,
Cuckow, jugge, jugge, pu we, to witta woo.
The fields breathe sweete, the dayzies kisse our feete,
Young lovers meete, old wives a sunning sit;
In every streete, these tunes our eares doe greete,
Cuckow, jugge, jugge, pu we, to witta woo.
Spring, the sweete spring.
—Thomas Nashe (1567-1601)
*
SPRING
Nothing is so beautiful as Spring—
When weeds, in wheels, shoot long and lovely and lush;
Thrush’s eggs look little low heavens, and thrush
Through the echoing timber does so rinse and wring
The ear, it strikes like lightnings to hear him sing;
The glassy peartree leaves and blooms, they brush
The descending blue; that blue is all in a rush
With richness; the racing lambs too have fair their fling.
What is all this juice and all this joy?
A strain of the earth’s sweet being in the beginning
In Eden garden. — Have, get, before it cloy,
Before it cloud, Christ, lord, and sour with sinning,
Innocent mind and Mayday in girl and boy,
Most, O maid’s child, thy choice and worthy the winning.
—Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844-1889)
*
A Thin Sliver at the Door
All she ever needed was the one sliver of air that hovered between the door and the frame. That small space was a persistent invitation. She would look around and make sure no one was in the room, then quietly get up from her chair, turn sideways, and slip through the crack between the heavy oak door and its sash. The room left behind was dark and immobile, everything inert, waiting without expectation or possibility. But once through the door the air changed. It expanded in the light, vibrating. The world was hushed, but with a kind of openness—something was just about to happen. When she went out, when she slipped through that crack, the world changed and so did she. The resonant hum of the air struck a note of movement in her body and she became more lithe, more supple. And the light–of course, the light–that made all the difference. In the trees the leaves moved gently, dappled by the light. The ground seemed alive, as if it too would burst into motion—iridescent green, chocolate brown, gray-blue in the stones. She heard her own low humming but there were other songs as well, perhaps birds or even insects in the fields, perhaps the echo of a bell from the far buildings. When she was out here she didn’t need anything. Everything felt inviting and reassuring. She never knew how long she was outside, how much time had passed, since she never felt any tug of memory when she was there. She moved and listened and watched. That was all. And that was more than enough. But eventually in the back of her mind a small cloud would begin to gather, pulling her into its shaded heaviness. The cloud would become bigger and more compelling than the trees or the air and she would turn toward it reluctantly. The cloud covered more and more of her vision and she found herself looking for the door, the way back through the crack into the dark, static room. She was never sure how she actually got back in but would suddenly look around, groggily, and realize here she was again. Everything felt heavy. The world was dense. This last time, though, she remembered something—just as she was following the cloud, just as it grew to include her, she held her hand out to the nearest tree and touched the leaves. She pulled some from the lowest branch and held them in her hands. Even back in the room she had them. She looked down and saw their glittering green and inhaled their unnamable smell. She held them and remembered. She looked up to see that small sliver of air between the door and its frame.
—Deborah Buchanan
*
Come Spring
The first warm days of spring, give them to me:
a tepid rain, crocus poking through last year’s leaves.
Give me the heart of it: pale yellow, frail blue,
trees bare but for the hard buds, the few birds.
To hear the screen door slam again. To shoo
the flies from the house, the bowled fruit.
I’ll take all of it, Mother of Summer, the smell
of manure shoveled over the potatoes. Diesel
fumes from the refuse truck. Scent of creek bottom,
feral, lime laced. Cracked effusion of rotting eggs.
Even sinus infections and rusty rake tines sunk
in rank earth near the shed. Mushroom spores.
The asthmatic crank of winter-bound bikes. Fevers,
flu, cold sores, loose ends. Even the crows,
hawking their dull black cloaks from the shiny wings
of iridescent spring. Let them ride the rippled air
over the barren Sunday parking lots, the farther fields,
where the weeds will grow thorny, wild and tall.
—Dorianne Laux
*
Kim Stafford & Alan Benditt suggested these poems from Emily:
A Light exists in Spring
Not present on the Year
At any other period —
When March is scarcely here
A Color stands abroad
On Solitary Fields
That Science cannot overtake
But Human Nature feels.
It waits upon the Lawn,
It shows the furthest Tree
Upon the furthest Slope you know
It almost speaks to you.
Then as Horizons step
Or Noons report away
Without the Formula of sound
It passes and we stay —
A quality of loss
Affecting our Content
As Trade has suddenly encroached
Upon a Sacrament.
*
Spring comes on the World –
I sight the Aprils –
Hueless to me until thou come
As, till the Bee
Blossoms stand negative,
Touched to Conditions
By a Hum.
–Emily Dickinson
*
Alan also sent us some haiku, inspired by Spring:
Look at this world even its
grasses right under my feet
feed us
Grasshoppers in the chilly breeze
sing
as if you’ll never sing again
Spring rain:
a mouse is lapping
the Sumida River.
—Issa
*
I don’t know
which tree it comes from,
that fragrance
Spring!
a nameless hill
in the haze.
—Basho
*
the pheasant sings-
the earth turns into
various grasses
I forget
to remember the days –
yet these spring deer
squatting
the frog observes
the clouds
to be in a world
eating white rice
amid plum fragrance
—Chiyo-ni
*
”peace, love, happiness & understanding” is one year old!
HURRAY!!!
It began on the Spring Equinox, March 19, 2020, as “peace, love & happiness,” a weekly newsletter. The “understanding” got added on June 25, 2020. I started thinking of it as a “journal,” rather than a “newsletter” at some point. It became bi-weekly, instead of weekly on December 10, 2020. Lots of friends have contributed images, poems and other writings, as well as suggestions for poems.
THANK YOU!!! (in no particular order) to:
Kim Stafford, Prabu Muruganantham, Deborah Buchanan, Lonnie Glinski, Shadrach Alexander, Charles Erickson, Nancy Yeilding, Josh Underhill, Howard Thoresen, Esther Elizabeth, Bill Faricy, Katie Radditz, Ken Margolis, Will Hornyak, Joshua Barnes, Ashley Lucas, Jeff Kuehner, Alex Tretbar, Bill Hughes, Doug Marx, Randall Brown, Jude Russell, Jeffrey Sher and Aaron Gilbert. (n.b. If you are a reader of “peace, love, happiness & understanding,” you are invited to contribute!)
Speaking of Aaron Gilbert… He was granted clemency by Governor Kate Brown, and got out of prison on February 25, 2021—twenty months early! I’ve had the pleasure of video-visiting with him by phone. Unsurprisingly, he’s happy to be out of prison! I’m looking forward to getting together soon in person—(with all the necessary safety precautions.)
peace, love & fecundity
Johnny
Details
- Start:
- March 18, 2021
- End:
- March 31, 2021