Wednesday, 6 December 2017

Two Poems

We've been working on poetry in my Grade 8 class. The process is to find a poet we admire, explore how they write and adopt an element of their technique in our own poems. As I worked to model for students I wrote two poems. The one I shared for students to work on with me is called "Medusa". Gwen Harwood's cycle of poems called "1927" gave me inspiration.

The other poem I didn't share because I'm a little unsettled by it. The inspiration came from a poem I stumbled across by Stephane Mallarme. Every now and then a poem or a piece of prose will reach off the page and punch you: not just because it's a great poem; also, I think, because it is saying something you are just then ripe to hear. My poem responds to the idea of cutting into the future but the metaphor seemed too raw to use as a model for students. Still, I think it's a poem worth sharing. Here's Mallarme's poem and then my own. And below that is the my poem "Medusa" which I shared with students.


Stéphane Mallarmé
A Toast
Stephane Mallarme
By Pierre Auguste Renoir (1841–1919)
[Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons


Nothing, this foam, virgin verse
Depicting the chalice alone:
Far off a band of Sirens drown
Many of them head first.

We sail, O my various
Friends, I already at the stern,
You at the lavish prow that churns
The lightning’s and the winters’ flood:

A sweet intoxication urges me
Despite pitching, tossing, fearlessly
To offer this toast while standing

Solitude, reef, and starry veil
To whatever’s worthy of knowing
The white anxiety of our sail.



Undefined


cogdogblog - https://www.flickr.com/photos/cogdog/5702592254/


Purity, a knife, cutting
Into the virgin white 
Of the blank space.

My cursor doing
Violence to the 
Peaceful undefined. 

With good intent,
I break forward
Seeking to shape

A new understanding.
But the chaos
Of my voice

Cuts and cuts 
And cuts 
Again.

Searching for this
Elusive meaning
I am   

Most alive.        




Medusa. 

By Powerhouse Museum from Sydney, Australia
Girl (Cook family) on front doorstep carrying a
toy 'Life Savers' truck, Public Domain,
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=51424376

My Brother thought up the name
For the girl next door.
We played with her sister
And ran and explored
And did what young kids do.

When the younger sister appeared,
We’d scream “medusa”
Invoking the Greek monster who,
We had read, was so ugly 
That mortals were turned 

To stone 
Just by looking at her. 
We’d run and hide
Leaving her standing alone 
On her doorstep. 

Only now do I look back. 
Remembering our cruelty 
And hoping her heart 
Was not too much hardened
By the ugliness she saw. 





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