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  1. TopTop #511
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Song of Zazen

    All beings are primarily Buddhas.
    It is like water and ice:
    There is no ice apart from water;
    There are no Buddhas apart from beings.

    Not knowing how close the truth is to them,
    Beings seek for it afar -- what a pity!
    They are like those who, being in the midst of water,
    Cry out for water, feeling thirst.

    They are like the son of the rich man,
    Who, wandering away from his father,
    Goes astray amongst the poor.
    It is all due to their ignorance
    That beings transmigrate in the darkness
    Of the Six Paths of existence.

    When they wander from darkness to darkness,
    How can they ever be free from birth-and-death?

    As for the Dhyana practice as taught in the Mahayana,
    No amount of praise can exhaust its merits.
    The Six Paramitas--beginning with the Giving, Observing the Precepts,
    And other good deeds, variously enumerated,
    Such as Nembutsu, Repentance, Moral Training, and so on -
    All are finally reducible to the practice of Dhyana.

    The merit of Dhyana practice, even during a single sitting,
    Erases the countless sins accumulated in the past.
    Where then are the Evil Paths to misguide us?
    The Pure Land cannot be far away.

    Those who, for once, listening to the Dharma
    In all humility,
    Praise it and faithfully follow it,
    Will be endowed with innumerable merits.

    But how much more so when you turn your eyes within yourselves
    And have a glimpse into your self-nature!
    You find that the self-nature is no-nature -
    The truth permitting no idle sophistry.
    For you, then, open the gate leading to the oneness of cause and effect;
    Before you, then, lies a straight road of non-duality and non-trinity.

    When you understand that form is the form of the formless,
    Your coming-and-going takes place nowhere else but where you are
    When you understand that thought is the thought of the thought-less
    Your singing-and-dancing is no other than the voice of the Dharma
    How boundless is the sky of Samadhi
    How refreshingly bright is the moon of the Fourfold Wisdom
    Being so is there anything you lack?
    As the Absolute presents itself before you
    The place where you stand is the Land of the Lotus,
    And your person - the body of the Buddha.


    - Hakuin
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  2. TopTop #512
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Red

    Toyon berries,
    kindling the mind’s eye, the spirit body
    on a shriveling December morning.
    Ideas enough to span the Serengeti
    spawn inside me, all from a dither of red
    in a ransacked plantation of green.
    Red so deep it ferrets behind my eyes,
    rounding up neurons, branding synapses
    yelling Wake up! I am the soul of being alive.

    I am the fluid rhapsody in your veins
    I am the bass note in a sunshine symphony
    I attract hummingbirds to your lips
    I am the satin lining of your joy pocket
    I gloss your infant body at birth

    I am red, ruby red, garnet red, crimson red,
    pomegranate, scarlet and betelnut.

    My eyes can discern red just coming on,
    red at its zenith, red passing its time, fading,
    finally red making landfall, becoming un-visible.
    After, my eyes rest, zinging with the memory.

    I know the rev of red cannot by sustained,
    I ask for only a scatter of berries
    throughout my days.

    - Penelope La Montagne
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  3. TopTop #513
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Night Turn

    In late summer after the day's heat is over
    I walk out after dark into the still garden
    wet leaves fragrance of ginger and kamani
    the feel of the path underfoot still recalling
    a flow of water that found its way long ago
    toads are rustling under the lemon trees
    looking back I can see through the branches
    the light in the kitchen where we were standing
    a moment ago in our life together

    - W.S. Merwin
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  4. TopTop #514
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Journey Into The Interior

    In the long journey out of the self,
    There are many detours, washed-out interrupted raw places
    Where the shale slides dangerously
    And the back wheels hang almost over the edge
    At the sudden veering, the moment of turning.
    Better to hug close, wary of rubble and falling stones.
    The arroyo cracking the road, the wind-bitten buttes, the canyons,
    Creeks swollen in midsummer from the flash-flood roaring into the narrow valley.
    Reeds beaten flat by wind and rain,
    Grey from the long winter, burnt at the base in late summer.
    -- Or the path narrowing,
    Winding upward toward the stream with its sharp stones,
    The upland of alder and birchtrees,
    Through the swamp alive with quicksand,
    The way blocked at last by a fallen fir-tree,
    The thickets darkening,
    The ravines ugly.

    - Theodore Roethke
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  5. TopTop #515
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    The Thread
    *
    Something is very gently,
    invisibly, silently,
    pulling at me-a thread
    or net of threads
    finer than cobweb and as
    elastic. I haven't tried
    the strength of it. No barbed hook
    pierced and tore me. Was it
    not long ago this thread
    began to draw me? Or
    way back? Was I
    born with its knot about my
    neck, a bridle? Not fear
    but a stirring
    of wonder makes me
    catch my breath when I feel
    the tug of it when I thought
    it had loosened itself and gone.

    - Denise Levertov
    Last edited by Larry Robinson; 12-05-2009 at 08:45 AM.
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  6. TopTop #516
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    To a Leaf Falling in Winter

    At sundown when a day's words
    have gathered at the feet of the trees
    lining up in silence
    to enter the long corridors
    of the roots into which they
    pass one by one thinking
    that they remember the place
    as they feel themselves climbing
    away from their only sound
    while they are being forgotten
    by their bright circumstances
    they rise through all of the rings
    listening again
    afterward as they
    listened once and they come
    to where the leaves used to live
    during their lives but have gone now
    and they too take the next step
    beyond the reach of meaning

    - W. S. Merwin
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  7. TopTop #517
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Forgetfulness

    The name of the author is the first to go
    followed obediently by the title, the plot,
    the heartbreaking conclusion, the entire novel
    which suddenly becomes one you have never read, never
    even heard of,
    as if, one by one, the memories you used to harbor
    decided to retire to the southern hemisphere of the brain,
    to a little fishing village where there are no phones.
    Long ago you kissed the nine Muses goodbye
    and watched the quadratic equation pack its bag,
    and even now as you memorize the order of the planets,
    something else is slipping away, a state flower perhaps,
    the address of an uncle, the capital of Paraguay.
    Whatever it is you are struggling to remember
    it is not poised on the tip of your tongue,
    not even lurking in some obscure corner of your spleen.
    It has floated away down a dark mythological river
    whose name begins with an L as far as you can recall,
    well on your own way to oblivion where you will join those
    who have even forgotten how to swim and how to ride a
    bicycle.
    No wonder you rise in the middle of the night
    to look up the date of a famous battle in a book on war.
    No wonder the moon in the window seems to have drifted
    out of a love poem that you used to know by heart.

    -*Billy Collins
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  8. TopTop #518
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Ice Bound

    Sky’s gray sheet spreads icy rain.
    Through the night we heard the branches cracking.
    Now they bend with the bowed ache of apostrophes.
    Backs to the window, sitting on the couch, we listen
    as the radio announces the list of schools closed.

    An hour earlier I inched my way along
    the road, tires spinning toward the ditch.
    Now I read aloud to a teenage daughter,
    who tolerates my foolishness, my claim
    that Lao Tzu traversed a more slippery world.

    With two books open on my lap, one in my hand,
    two on the floor, I’m surrounded by imperfect
    translations: a gathering chaos; something
    mysteriously formed; without beginning,
    without end; formless and perfect.

    She responds, Sure,
    I knew that, so what? I persist:
    that existed before the heavens and the earth;
    before the universe was born. She’s ready to go
    upstairs and listen to the radio. I ask,

    What was her face before her parents were born?
    she answers, Nothing. I ask again.
    She says it again. Where are the angels,
    nights on humble knees, the psalms of faith,
    the saints of daylight? She walks out of the room.

    I’m surrounded by thin books.
    How pointless to go anywhere on this day,
    or maybe any other, but then
    the time comes when there is
    no other way but to stand firm on ice.

    - Walter L. Bargen
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  9. TopTop #519
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    A Physics of Sudden Light

    This is just about light, how suddenly
    One comes upon it sometimes and is surprised.

    In light, something is lifted.
    That is the property of light,

    And in it one weighs less.
    A broad and wide leap of light

    Encountered suddenly for a moment —
    You are not where you were

    But you have not moved. It’s the moment
    That startles you up out of dream.

    But the other way around: It’s the moment, instead,
    That startles you into dream, makes you

    Close your eyes — that kind of light, the moment
    For which — in our language — we have only

    The word surprise, maybe a few others,
    But not enough. The moment is regular

    As with all the things regular
    At the closing of the twentieth century:

    A knowledge that electricity exists
    Somewhere inside the walls;

    That tonight the moon in some fashion will come out;
    That cold water is good to drink.

    The way taste slows a thing
    On its way into the body.

    Light, widened and slowed, so much of it: It
    Cannot be swallowed into the mouth of the eye,

    Into the throat of the pupil, there is
    So much of it. But we let it in anyway,

    Something in us knowing
    The appropriate mechanism, the moment’s lever.

    Light, the slow moment of everything fast.
    Like hills, those slowest waves, light,

    That slowest fire, all
    Confusion, confusion here

    One more part of clarity: In this light
    You are not where you were but you have not moved.

    - Alberto Rios
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  10. TopTop #520
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Long Course

    The days crawled by on their hands and knees
    As we sat meditating.
    Forty-five beads
    on the thread of time-
    a Buddhist rosary.
    But no prayers to Buddha-
    only respect
    and gratitude.

    - Tina Rosa
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  11. TopTop #521
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Deepening The Wonder

    Death is a favor to us,
    But our scales have lost their balance.

    The impermanence of the body
    Should give us great clarity,
    Deepening the wonder in our senses and eyes

    Of this mysterious existence we share
    And are surely just traveling through.

    If I were in the Tavern tonight,
    Hafiz would call for drinks

    And as the Master poured, I would be reminded
    That all I know of life and myself is that

    We are just a midair flight of golden wine
    Between His Pitcher and His Cup.

    If I were in the Tavern tonight,
    I would buy freely for everyone in this world

    Because our marriage with the Cruel Beauty
    Of time and space cannot endure very long.

    Death is a favor to us,
    But our minds have lost their balance.

    The miraculous existence and impermanence of
    Form
    Always makes the illumined ones
    Laugh and sing.

    - Hafiz
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  12. TopTop #522
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    The tragic gap . . .



    Tonight I heard the voice of hope,

    speaking to a small gathering of souls

    in a poorly heated room

    that once was warm,

    once was home and hearth for family,

    for an American family, released from internment—

    the family of Fred and Mary Okamoto.



    In the way of things—

    zoning laws get passed,

    neighborhoods get changed forever,

    commerce insinuates itself here and there

    and homes, some homes, cease to be homes—

    Oh, Felix culpa! Oh, happy accident!



    Following Hiroshima, following Nagasaki,

    following the Enola Gay and Mr. Tibbets,

    following Little Boy and Fat Man,

    following J. Robert Oppenheimer,

    following all of this and following, also, their internment,

    Fred and Mary allowed their home to house

    for more than half a century, the council—

    the World without War Council.



    And in the way of things—

    people grow old

    and old warriors for peace fade

    along with their military brethren

    and make way, then, for what is to follow—

    a different paradigm, this time, for peace.



    The home of Fred and Mary,

    in happy serendipity,

    houses now the Metta Center

    for Nonviolence Education.

    And into this center came,

    on that chilly December evening

    at the very close of our first decade

    of the twenty first century—in the way we mark our time—

    into to this center came that voice of hope I heard.1

    It came from an unassuming presence and was softly spoken.

    It told a tale more powerful than hate, more powerful than ignorance

    more powerful even than Little Boy or Fat Man—

    a tale of the human spirit, a tale of what can be, a tale of what actually is—

    unarmed, nonviolent peace makers entering war zones

    and without judgment or ideology bringing hostilities to a halt.



    And so, dear listener, I share this tale with you

    that you may know and have hope too,

    that you may know hope is not a solitary thing.

    It must be sought and fought for.

    It must be labored for.

    It must be shared to live.

    But as my voice of hope reminded me,

    in closing, hope does not live in isolation,

    separate from the slaughter and the suffering

    we see and feel in our gut—if we allow ourselves to.

    We cannot live, he said, in pain alone nor in hope alone.

    We must live in the tragic gap,

    holding at once the pain

    and the knowing

    of what can be—

    alive to our own being—

    as excruciating

    and as joyful

    as that is.

    - Bill Denham
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  13. TopTop #523
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Intruder

    I step out before breakfast
    to a chorus
    of retreating white-tailed haunches,
    twisting asunder, gouging grass,
    in random scatter of evasive maneuvers, until

    one tawny body lifts high and
    weightless,
    over a berm of chopped branches,
    and all stop -
    mid-retreat
    as if by some silent signal.

    We stare,
    stretching our spirits
    across the chasm of the wild,
    their deep brown eyes
    serious, stern, searching,
    at last, relieved:
    only me, after all -

    the rain falls softly,
    pearls in silence
    on their ancient backs, nascent antlers.

    - Scott O'Brien
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  14. TopTop #524
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Already



    When I get off the coach with the rest of the travelers

    Who have already departed one by one before the terminal,

    Then all will be empty. The old horses

    Dragging it down the ruts

    Wheeze and wrangle with the hitches,

    Two nags, hair always changing color,

    Choleric, persistent, and remorseless.



    When I leave that coach, be sure of this:

    It will be empty, a terminus attained

    By a vacancy.



    If nothing come of this,

    If not even one hiker perches his thumb on the passing air,

    (For a vessel gone before),



    Then pick up your little luggage of life

    And trudge back

    The way you came, into

    That disappearance. They will welcome you

    With open arms. You will be lost

    In their affection. That will be the price.



    But this price, the daily hay,

    Great as it is, is still less

    Than the fortune you would spend

    Distributing candy and infantilization.



    There is a rumor I heard

    About thieves like me. Some steal

    And are imprisoned. Others,

    And the whole world goes free.



    - Bruce Moody
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  15. TopTop #525
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    A Christmas Carol

    Away in a manger
    or a crack house
    or under a bridge
    or in a bomber-out village
    or a refugee camp
    or in the mesquite shade close to the border wall
    some Mary is giving birth.

    Even as you read this
    a child is being born.

    What if one of these were the promised one,
    the beacon of hope,
    the seed of a new light
    in a dark time?

    What if they all were?
    What gifts would you bring
    if you were wise?

    - Larry Robinson
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  16. TopTop #526
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    How She Works
    for Donna

    She is Persephone with no
    Demeter to rescue her. Above
    is always winter. Inside the cave
    she calls her office,
    she is a schizophrenic talking
    to the voices that enter her head.
    Disembodied voices chatter in her ears,
    she chats to the bodiless. Her disembodied
    voice climbs into their ears wherever
    they might be in their caves
    they call offices.

    She is hungry for more
    than pomegrantes, craves poetry,
    oysters and ripe stuffed olives.

    At night she dreams
    if she sleeps.
    She dreams of something she cannot
    imagine and so it has no name.
    Tight ripe buds push like crowning
    babies birthing into bright, electric air.
    Thin shoots of palest green
    wiggle and thrust through dark, amazed
    earth. Because she is blind
    she cannot name the colors. There are
    so many, no one could name them.

    She dreams of Spring.
    She dreams of breathing.
    She dreams her mother is searching for her.

    - Rebecca del Rio
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  17. TopTop #527
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    God's Wounds

    Through the great pain of stretching
    beyond all that pain has taught me
    the soft well at the base
    has opened, and life
    touching me there
    has turned me into a flower
    that prays for rain. Now
    I understand: to blossom
    is to pray, to wilt and shed
    is to pray, to turn to mulch
    is to pray, to stretch in the dark
    is to pray, to break surface
    after great months of ice
    is to pray, and to squeeze love
    up the stalky center toward the sky
    with only dreams of color
    is to pray, and finally to unfold
    again as if never before
    is to be the prayer.

    - Mark Nepo
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  18. TopTop #528
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Could Hope inspect her Basis

    Could Hope inspect her Basis
    Her Craft were done --
    Has a fictitious Charter
    Or it has none --

    Balked in the vastest instance
    But to renew --
    Felled by but one assassin --
    Prosperity --

    - Emily Dickinson
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  19. TopTop #529
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Written on Christmas Eve, 1513

    I salute you. I am your friend, and my love for you goes deep.

    There is nothing I can give you which you have not. But there is much,

    very much, that, while I cannot give it, you can take. No heaven can

    come to us unless our hearts find rest in it today. Take heaven!

    No peace lies in the future which is not hidden in this present little instant.

    Take peace! The gloom of the world is but a shadow. Behind it, yet within

    our reach, is joy. There is radiance and glory in darkness, could we but see.
    And to see, we have only to look. I beseech you to look!



    Life is so generous a giver. But we, judging its gifts by their covering,

    cast them away as ugly or heavy or hard. Remove the covering, and you

    will find beneath it a living splendor, woven of love by wisdom, with power.

    Welcome it, grasp it, and you touch the angel's hand that brings it to you.

    Everything we call a trial, a sorrow or a duty, believe me, that angel's hand is there.

    The gift is there and the wonder of an overshadowing presence. Your joys, too,

    be not content with them as joys. They, too, conceal diviner gifts.


    Life is so full of meaning and purpose, so full of beauty beneath its covering,

    that you will find earth but cloaks your heaven. Courage then to claim it; that is all!

    But courage you have, and the knowledge that we are pilgrims together,

    wending through unknown country home.


    And so, at this time, I greet you, not quite as the world sends greetings,

    but with profound esteem and with the prayer that for you, now and

    forever, the day breaks and shadows flee away.

    - Fra Giovanni
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  20. TopTop #530
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    And the Cantilevered Inference Shall Hold the Day



    Things are not as they seem: the innuendo of everything makes

    itself felt and trembles towards meanings we never intuited

    or dreamed. Take, for example, how the warbler, perched on a



    mere branch, can kidnap the day from its tediums and send us

    heavenwards, or how, held up by nothing we really see, our

    spirits soar and then, in a mysterious series of twists and turns,



    come to a safe landing in a field, encircled by greenery. Nothing

    I can say to you here can possibly convince you that a man

    as unreliable as I have been can smuggle in truths between tercets



    and quatrains on scraps of paper, but the world as we know

    is full of surprises, and the likelihood that here, in the shape

    of this very bird, redemption awaits us should not be dismissed



    so easily. Each year, days swivel and diminish along their inscrutable

    axes, then lengthen again until we are bathed in light we were not

    prepared for. Last night, lying in bed with nothing to hold onto



    but myself, I gazed at the emptiness beside me and saw there, in the

    shape of absence, something so sweet and deliberate I called it darling.

    No one who encrusticates (I made that up!) his silliness in a bowl,



    waiting for sanctity, can ever know how lovely playfulness can be,

    and, that said, let me wish you a Merry One (or Chanukah if you

    prefer), and may whatever holds you up stay forever beneath you,



    and may the robin find many a worm, and our cruelties abate,

    and may you be well and happy and full of mischief as I am,

    and may all your nothings, too, hold something up and sing.



    - Michael Blumenthal
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  21. TopTop #531
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
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    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    I Thought Again of Jacob Kahn

    Then I thought again of Jacob Kahn and again I wondered:
    Do we all get old and sick so quickly? Then there is almost
    no time left at all...Do you hear the pain carried on the wind? It is the cry of wasted lives...Who dares add to that cry? Who dares drain the world of its light?”


    Chaim Potok
    - My Name Is Asher Lev



    Being wheeled when wheeling

    long ago had such a free turning

    sound to it, the breeze

    the wheels that wings lift over wind.



    But here today I am cargo

    transported to still another clinic,

    a depot which may send me further on,

    the difference being, I don’t know where I’m going.



    Just months ago, not long before

    his death, my father’s face topped this

    image, I doing the pushing,

    he offering his dependence.



    But from my transported perspective

    such trust implies surrender,

    which, according to eastern philosophy,

    sort of is the goal.



    Here today though being

    transported, I do not find yielding

    to be at all agreeable.

    My mind has so ever much more



    to consider, paintings to be

    painted, poems to be written

    about so many things in illusory time,

    and all about finches.



    Red-headed paradise finches

    observed darting suspended by

    me? But I do not affect little birds

    except, perhaps, when I frighten them.



    Finches are not suspended

    by me.

    Birds do not dart by such cause.

    I ain’t their puppeteer.



    Yet I mustn’t waste an instant

    even when I begin (or terminate) feeling

    so numbingly tired,

    I need to remember to write, to edit.



    While, much of this I’ll cut to shard,

    The red-headed paradise finches

    must remain intact,

    in touch with all that nests herein.



    One finch burned

    red into both my retinas,

    flitted about such corneas as

    laid like ice in wait.



    When a paradise finch clicks

    into material lenses,

    pollinating sight with cochineal

    dust such stuff of vivid fairies,



    I, along with Jacob Kahn, hold

    little tolerance for wasting any detritus

    that once discovered turns glorious

    when we ourselves take wing.



    - Ed Coletti
    Last edited by Larry Robinson; 12-22-2009 at 07:23 AM.
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  22. TopTop #532
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    The Cellist of Sarajevo


    Tomazo Albinoni could never have imagined Sarajevo

    as he crafted the notes of his Adagio.

    The son of a wealthy man, he had no cares,

    and devoted himself to music.

    A self proclaimed dilettante,

    indulging himself in beauty.


    The Adagio enfolds the listener,

    seven minutes of deliberate playing,

    slowing the breath as the bow strokes the strings,

    the cello’s voice, so human,

    words murmured behind a secret door.


    In the Hell of Sarajevo rumors of fresh bread,

    a connection to a normal world, now so far away.

    They stood in anticipation, the smell so tantalizing,

    as the bakery disappeared in the blast of mortar shell.


    For twenty two days, one for each of these neighbors,

    he carried his cello to the crater,

    clad in black and white, music on the stand.

    Amidst the snipers and the rubble,

    playing Albinoni’s Adagio for them, and for himself.

    Like Orpheus, ascending on the music

    from the underworld of despair.


    Tomazo wrote music for the pure simple joy of it,

    but Vedran descending the Adagio’s minor chords,

    to find the steady pulse -

    a precise and stately dance on

    the path leading out of Hell.

    Dipping into the wells of practice,

    the waters of beauty seeping into his, and our, being.

    Every stroke a conscious vote to return.

    Each note a step on the shattered path to life.

    - Alan Cohen
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  23. TopTop #533
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Hokusai Says

    Hokusai says Look carefully.
    He says pay attention, notice.
    He says keep looking, stay curious.
    He says there is no end to seeing.

    He says Look Forward to getting old.
    He says keep changing,
    you just get more who you really are.
    He says get stuck, accept it, repeat yourself
    as long as it's interesting.

    He says keep doing what you love.
    He says keep praying.
    He says every one of us is a child,

    every one of us is ancient,
    every one of us has a body.
    He says every one of us is frightened.
    He says every one of us has to find a way to live with fear.

    He says everything is alive -
    shells, buildings, people, fish, mountains, trees.
    Wood is alive.
    Water is alive.
    Everything has its own life.
    Everything lives inside us.
    He says live with the world inside you.

    He says it doesn't matter if you draw, or write books.
    It doesn't matter if you saw wood, or catch fish.
    It doesn't matter if you sit at home
    and stare at the ants on your verandah or the shadows of the trees
    and grasses in your garden.

    It matters that you care.
    It matters that you feel.
    It matters that you notice.
    It matters that life lives through you.

    Contentment is life living through you.
    Joy is life living through you.
    Satisfaction and strength
    are life living through you.
    Peace is life living through you.

    He says don't be afraid.
    Don't be afraid.
    Look, feel, let life take you by the hand.
    Let life live through you.

    - Roger Keyes
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  24. TopTop #534
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Buckeye

    Heading up the Tuolomne
    one early July evening
    the steep slopes slant back and away
    from the movement of water

    a pale tawny boneyard of trees
    stretches river bank to ridgeline.
    The skeletal clatter of limbs
    sours the day, this encounter
    with so much death. In the narrows,
    those dry sculpted shapes become clear.
    Like a dream the trouble melting
    in a comedy of error.
    It is the buckeye, thousands strong
    summer deciduous, proud, bare.
    Other trees beginning to bloom and fruit,
    watch the buckeye leaves curl in the heat,
    wonder what’s wrong, as the miscreant tree
    papers the ground with fandangos of
    spiraled, sunburned currency.

    The buckeye, clearly out of step,
    its towering white panicles
    coming too late in the season
    and rivaling each bride’s bouquet.
    November buckeye is still bare
    and bent with fruit, leathery pears
    that drape then crack then let go
    the smooth amber seed the Pomo
    made a mash of these and poured it
    into the river to stun the fish
    and carried the nub of the nut
    around like a lucky rabbit’s foot.
    January finds other trees napping,
    while buckeye opens her monkey’s fist
    of leaves, each little open hand gestures

    hang on, I am here to tell you
    the others are coming, in time,
    all will be coming in good time.

    - Penelope La Montagne
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  25. TopTop #535
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Advice


    Someone dancing inside us
    has learned only a few steps:
    the "Do-Your-Work" in 4/4 time,
    the "What-Do-You-Expect" Waltz.
    He hasn't noticed yet the woman
    standing away from the lamp.
    the one with black eyes
    who knows the rumba.
    and strange steps in jumpy rhythms
    from the mountains of Bulgaria.
    If they dance together,
    something unexpected will happen;
    if they don't, the next world
    will be a lot like this one.

    - Bill Holm
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  26. TopTop #536
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    After the Gentle Poet Kobayashi Issa

    New Year’s morning—
    everything is in blossom!
    I feel about average.

    A huge frog and I
    staring at each other,
    neither of us moves.

    This moth saw brightness
    in a woman’s chamber—
    burned to a crisp.

    Asked how old he was
    the boy in the new kimono
    stretched out all five fingers.

    Blossoms at night,
    like people
    moved by music

    Napped half the day;
    no one
    punished me!

    Fiftieth birthday:

    From now on,
    It’s all clear profit,
    every sky.

    Don’t worry, spiders,
    I keep house
    casually.

    These sea slugs,
    they just don’t seem
    Japanese.

    Hell:

    Bright autumn moon;
    pond snails crying
    in the saucepan.

    - Robert Hass
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  27. TopTop #537
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Biscuits Beyond Compare

    When I first started cooking at Tassajara, I had a problem. I couldn't get my biscuits to come out the way they were supposed to. I'd follow the recipe and try variations, but nothing worked These biscuits just didn’t measure up.

    Growing up I had "made" two kinds of biscuits. one was from Bisquik and the other from Pillsbury. For the Bisquik biscuits you added milk to the mix and then blobbed the dough in spoonfuls onto the pan—you didn't even need to roll them out. The biscuits from Pillsbury came in a kind of cardboard can. You rapped the can on a corner of the counter and it popped open. Then you twisted the can open more, put the premade biscuits on a pan and baked them. I really liked those Pillsbury biscuits. Isn't that what biscuits should taste like? Mine just weren't coming out right.

    It's wonderful and amazing the ideas we get about what biscuits should taste like, or what a life should look like. Compared to what? Canned biscuits from Pillsbury? Leave It to Beaver? People who ate my biscuits could extol their virtues, eating one after another, but to me these (perfectly good) biscuits just weren't "right. "

    Finally one day came a shifting-into-place, an awakening: not "right" compared to what? Oh, my word, I'd been trying to make canned Pillsbury biscuits! Then came an exquisite moment of actually tasting my biscuits without comparing them to some (previously hidden) standard. They were wheaty, flakey, buttery, "sunny, earthy, real" (as Rilke's sonnet proclaims). They were incomparably alive, present, vibrant—in fact much more satisfying than any memory.

    These occasions can be so stunning, so liberating, these moments when you realize your life is just fine as it is, thank you. Only the insidious comparison to a beautifully prepared, beautifully packaged product made it seem insufficient. Trying to produce a biscuit—a life—with no dirty bowls, no messy feelings, no depression, no anger was so frustrating. Then savoring, actually tasting the present moment of expedience—how much more complex and multi-faceted. How unfathomable. A thought. . . a feeling. . . ants crawling on the ground in the sunlight.

    As zen students we spent years trying to make it look right, trying to cover the faults, conceal the messes. We knew what the Bisquik Zen Student looked like: calm, buoyant, cheerful, energetic, deep, profound. Our motto, as one of my friends said, was, "Looking good. " We’ve all done It: trying to look good as a husband, wife or parent. Trying to attain perfection. Trying to make Pillsbury biscuits.

    Well, to heck with it I say, wake up and smell the coffee. How about some good old home cooking, the biscuits of today. Handle each ingredient with sincerity arid whole-heartedness. The results will take care of themselves. Savor them.

    - Ed Brown
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  28. TopTop #538
    Gemini
     

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Thank you- loved it- great way to start the New Year
    wonderful reminder of acceptance of what is
    reminder to be grateful for what we have and love it
    either love it or do it another way
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  29. TopTop #539
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    To A Friend whose Work Has Come To Nothing

    Now all the truth is out,
    Be secret and take defeat
    From any brazen throat,
    For how can you compete,
    Being honour bred, with one
    Who, were it proved he lies,
    Were neither shamed in his own
    Nor in his neighbours' eyes?
    Bred to a harder thing
    Than Triumph, turn away
    And like a laughing string
    Whereon mad fingers play
    Amid a place of stone,
    Be secret and exult,
    Because of all things known
    That is most difficult.

    - William Butler Yeats
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  30. TopTop #540
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Straight Talk from the Fox

    Listen says fox it is music to run
    over the hills to lick
    dew from the leaves to nose along
    the edges of the ponds to smell the fat
    ducks in their bright feathers but
    far out, safe in their rafts of
    sleep. It is like
    music to visit the orchard, to find
    the vole sucking the sweet of the apple, or the
    rabbit with his fast-beating heart. Death itself
    is a music. Nobody has ever come close to
    writing it down, awake or in a dream. It cannot
    be told. It is flesh and bones
    changing shape and with good cause, mercy
    is a little child beside such an invention. It is
    music to wander the black back roads
    outside of town no one awake or wondering
    if anything miraculous is ever going to
    happen, totally dumb to the fact of every
    moment's miracle. Don't think I haven't
    peeked into windows. I see you in all your seasons
    making love, arguing, talking about God
    as if he were an idea instead of the grass,
    instead of the stars, the rabbit caught
    in one good teeth-whacking hit and brought
    home to the den. What I am, and I know it, is
    responsible, joyful, thankful. I would not
    give my life for a thousand of yours.

    - Mary Oliver
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