Monday, February 3, 2014

A Poem On A Monday

My absence on here has been due to the fact that I've been scoring essays for the SAT test so what little spare time I have is spent working. One more week to go. In the meantime, here are two poems to start the week off. (And RIP Phillip Seymore Hoffman. I loved him in every movie of his that I saw. A true master.)

The Real Work

It may be that when we no longer know what to do
we have come to our real work,
and that when we no longer know which way to go
we have come to our real journey.
The mind that is not baffled is not employed.
The impeded stream is the one that sings.
by Wendell Berry
Kissing a Horse
Of the two spoiled, barn-sour geldings
we owned that year, it was Red—
skittish and prone to explode
even at fourteen years—who’d let me
hold to my face his own: the massive labyrinthine
caverns of the nostrils, the broad plain
up the head to the eyes. He’d let me stroke
his coarse chin whiskers and take
his soft meaty underlip
in my hands, press my man’s carnivorous
kiss to his grass-nipping upper half of one, just
so that I could smell
the long way his breath had come from the rain
and the sun, the lungs and the heart,
from a world that meant no harm.
by Robert Wrigley

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