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the world for a little longer

Posted on Oct 25th, 2009 by Laura : graceriver Laura
Img_9269hallloween
A friend recently gave me a copy of Louise Gluck's book of poetry A Village Life. I have had mixed feelings about her poems in the past but I love these. She creates a simple, luminous world with and in these poems and I like going there.
 

Twilight


All day he works at his cousin's mill,

So when he gets home at twilight, he always sits down at this one window,

Sees one time of day, twilight.

There should be more time like this, to sit and dream.

It's as his cousin says:

Living---living takes you away from sitting.


In the window, not the world but a squared-off landscape

Representing the world. The seasons change,

Each visible only a few hours a day.

Green things followed by golden things followed by whiteness---

Abstractions from which come intense pleasures,

Like the figs on the table.


At dusk, the sun goes down in a haze of red fire between two poplars.

It goes down late in summer----sometimes it's hard to stay awake.


Then everything falls away.

The world for a little longer

Is something to see, then only something to hear,

Crickets, cicadas.

Or to smell sometimes, aroma of lemon trees, of orange trees.

Then sleep takes this away also.


But it's easier to give things up like this, experimentally,

For a matter of hours.


I open my fingers---

I let everything go.


Visual world, language,

Rustling of leaves in the night,

Smell of high grass, of woodsmoke.


I let it go, then I light the candle.


--Louise Gluck

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ray : POETMARINER
1 day later
ray said

Louise Gluck's poetry often reminds me of Thomas Hardy's attempts to grasp a kernal of metaphysical truth in  the fleeting reality passing bye; whether it be a walk in an ancient cemetery  or a glance at a autumn sunset.We often  capture the meaning of history in time at the expense of losing  its answers in the space of a single day.

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