WS Merwin

W.S. Merwin–Online Poems Essay, Research Paper


GREEN FIELDS


By this part of the century few are left who believe


in the animals for they are not there in the carved parts


of them served on plates and the pleas from the slatted trucks


are sounds of shadows that possess no future


there is still game for the pleasure of killing


and there are pets for the children but the lives that followed


courses of their own other than ours and older


have been migrating before us some are already


far on the way and yet Peter with his gaunt cheeks


and point of white beard the face of an aged Lawrence


Peter who had lived on from another time and country


and who had seen so many things set out and vanish


still believed in heaven and said he had never once


doubted it since his childhood on the farm in the days


of the horses he had not doubted it in the worst


times of the Great War and afterward and he had come


to what he took to be a kind of earthly


model of it as he wandered south in his sixties


by that time speaking the language well enough


for them to make him out he took the smallest roads


into a world he thought was a thing of the past


with wildflowers he scarcely remembered and neighbors


working together scything the morning meadows


turning the hay before the noon meal bringing it in


by milking time husbandry and abundance


all the virtues he admired and their reward bounteous


in the eyes of a foreigner and there he remained


for the rest of his days seeing what he wanted to see


until the winter when he could no longer fork


the earth in his garden and then he gave away


his house land everything and committed himself


to a home to die in an old chateau where he lingered


for some time surrounded by those who had lost


the use of body or mind and as he lay there he told me


that the wall by his bed opened almost every day


and he saw what was really there and it was eternal life


as he recognized at once when he saw the gardens


he had made and the green fields where he had been


a child and his mother was standing there then the wall would close


and around him again were the last days of the world


Online Source: http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/poetry/antholog/merwin/green.htm


UNKNOWN BIRD


Out of the dry days


through the dusty leaves


far across the valley


those few notes never


heard here before


one fluted phrase


floating over its


wandering secret


all at once wells up


somewhere else


and is gone before it


goes on fallen into


its own echo leaving


a hollow through the air


that is dry as before


where is it from


hardly anyone


seems to have noticed it


so far but who now


would have been listening


it is not native here


that may be the one


thing we are

sure of


it came from somewhere


else perhaps alone


so keeps on calling for


no one who is here


hoping to be heard


by another of its own


unlikely origin


trying once more the same few


notes that began the song


of an oriole last heard


years ago in another


existence there


it goes again tell


no one it is here


foreign as we are


who are filling the days


with a sound of our own


Online Source: http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/poetry/antholog/merwin/unknownbird.htm


TERM


At the last minute a word is waiting


not heard that way before and not to be


repeated or ever be remembered


one that always had been a household word


used in speaking of the ordinary


everyday recurrences of living


not newly chosen or long considered


or a matter for comment afterward


who would ever have thought it was the one


saying itself from the beginning through


all its uses and circumstances to


utter at last that meaning of its own


for which it had long been the only word


though it seems now that any word would do


Online Source: http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/poetry/antholog/merwin/term.htm


ANY TIME


How long ago the day is


when at last I look at it


with the time it has taken


to be there still in it


now in the transparent light


with the flight in the voices


the beginning in the leaves


everything I remember


and before it before me


present at the speed of light


in the distance that I am


who keep reaching out to it


seeing all the time faster


where it has never stirred from


before there is anything


the darkness thinking the light


Online Source: http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/poetry/antholog/merwin/anytime.htm


BEFORE THE FLOOD


Why did he promise me


that we would build ourselves


an ark all by ourselves


out in back of the house


on New York Avenue


in Union City New Jersey


to the singing of the streetcars


after the story


of Noah whom nobody


believed about the waters


that would rise over everything


when I told my father


I wanted us to build


an ark of our own there


in the back yard under


the kitchen could we do that


he told me that we could


I want to I said and will we


he promised me that we would


why did he promise that


I wanted us to start then


nobody will believe us


I said that we are building


an ark because the rains


are coming and that was true


nobody ever believed


we would build an ark there


nobody would believe


that the waters were coming


Online Source: http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/poetry/antholog/merwin/flood.htm

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