I never go anywhere without my journal and fountain pens, because you just never know when a poem might magically materialize in front of your eyes. It could be a fingernail of moon in a morning sky. Or a blueberry pancake made with last summer's berries that still taste of sun and sand. Or an angel buried in snow up to its wings.
Sharon Olds conjures poems out of thin air . . .
Station
Coming in off the dock after writing,
I approached the house,
and saw your fine grandee face
lit by a lamp with a parchment shade
the color of flame.
An elegant hand on your beard. Your tapered
eyes found me on the lawn. You looked
as the lord looks down from a narrow window
and you are descended from lords. Calmly, with no
hint of shyness, you examined me,
the wife who runs out on the dock to write
as soon as one of the children is in bed,
leaving the other to you.
Your thin
mouth, flexible as an archer’s bow,
did not curve. We spent a long moment
in the truth of our situation, the poems
heavy as poached game hanging from my hands.
I love this image of a young Olds sneaking away to write poems at the end of the day, after her kids are in bed and the world is drifting into night. Gone are the days where rich patrons simply paid poets to write, providing money and housing and such. Instead, poets are busy parents and professors and doctors and insurance adjusters. As Olds describes, poets cobble together writing times from stolen moments.
Me? I think about poetry all the time. Sort of the same way that my dad, who was a licensed plumbing contractor for close to 70 years, always noticed bathroom fixtures and faucets and copper or lead piping. If you’re passionate about what you do, you will bring that passion to almost every other aspect of your life. So, when I see a spiderweb in the corner of a room, my first impulse isn’t to grab a broom or dust cloth and eliminate it. My first impulse is to stare at it, take a picture of it, take out my journal and write about it.
I see a muddle puddle rainbowed with and oil slick, and there's a poem. Snow melting to reveal piles of dog shit in the backyard: poem. First dandelion in the spring: poem. A wonderful piece of pecan pie: poem. An eagle crashing into Lake Superior to snatch a fish: poem. Every breath of every day: poems and poems and poems.
For me, poetry is the magic that fuels my waking (and sometimes sleeping) hours. I can't imagine a day without it. Neither can Olds.
Saint Marty wrote a poem for tonight that is a little tricky (pun intended), based on the following prompt from The Daily Poet:
On this day in 1874, magician Harry Houdini was born. Write a poem about a magician's trick or a poem where you are the magician or magician's assistant. Think of all the details that make up a magic show--the bunny in the hat, the doves, the sawing in half of a body, the lights, the smoke, the effects--and include your favorite details in your poem.
You Can't Get Blood from a Turnip
by: Martin Achatz
my dad used to say when I was
a kid, usually if I asked for money
or something too extravagant for him
and my mom to get me. I once wanted
a kit of magic, tricks that included
a plastic top hat with secret compartments,
handkerchiefs that tied themselves in knots,
a finger guillotine that never amputated
thumb or pinkie despite its razored edge.
No rabbit--just a stuffed toucan, spring-
loaded, that jumped out of the hat
like it was escaping a circle of hell
where toucans were forced to eat
sins until their stomachs bloated,
feathers smoked, bills melted like
popsicles on a July afternoon.
I never got my top hat with
toucan and Chinese rings the joined,
unjoined the way my brother coupled,
uncoupled with girls as easy as breathing.
My dad shook his head when I complained
about the lack of magic in my life, intoning
that phrase about root vegetables and bodily fluids,
as if that explained all the injustices of the world.