Night Song
Stack the cups and clear away;The bonfire sinks to ash;Daytime is so much trash,Night climbs the stairway.We have done what we can to use the light,Cricket and jar take over;Children snore, the smell of cloverTickles the poacher's nose as he treads it over.Poppy and rose swim in the warm remainder,Exhausted current of day;Cold comes down from the air, hayHears warm in the field what the lovers say.Bare to the teeming black the heady treeSighs in its sleep and stirs;Softly an owl-wing whirrs,The water chuckles, the paper-beetle burrs.Stack the cups and clear away;The bonfire sinks to ash;Daytime is so much trash,Night climbs the stairway.
-David Holbrook
I lifted that picture of David Holbrook from a rather lovely obituary of him in The Guardian. He died in 2011 at the good age of 88. He was a teacher and D-Day veteran as well as a quite prolific author--plays, memoirs, novels, as well as poetry.
As I had to Google some to figure it out, it might help you, too: jar in the second stanza will be a nightjar, a medium-sized insect-eating bird of the same family as what's called a nighthawk in North America.
Appropriate that I'm posting 'Night Song' at the very end of the day...
Such beautiful imagery! I love that line Softly an owl-wing whirrs, and Night climbs the stairway, too. :D
ReplyDeleteHe's a recent discovery for me. I liked the bit I read.
DeleteAt my age, I feel like I've done what I can to use the light, and I'm looking forward to having cricket and jar take over.
ReplyDeleteIt is suggestive, but then day comes again!
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