Showing posts with label trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trees. Show all posts

Sunday, January 13, 2019

Daily Dose


From Poems, by Samuel Rogers

TO AN OLD OAK

Radice in Tartara tendit. ~ Virg.

Trunk of a Giant now no more!
Once did thy limbs to heaven aspire;
Once, by a track untried before, 
Strike as resolving to explore 
Realms of infernal fire.

Round thee, alas, no shadows move!
From thee no sacred murmurs breathe!
Yet within thee, thyself a grove,
Once did the eagle scream above,
And the wolf howl beneath.

There once the steel-clad knight reclin'd,
His sable plumage tempest-toss'd;
And, as the death-bell smote the wind,
From towers long fled by human kind,
His brow the hero cross'd!

Then Culture came, and days serene,
And village-sports, and garlands gay.
Full many a pathway cross'd the green;
And maids and shepherd-youths were seen,
To celebrate the May.

Father of many a forest deep,
(Whence many a navy thunder-fraught)
Erst in their acorn-cells asleep,
Soon destin'd o'er the world to sweep,
Opening new spheres of thought!

Wont in the night of woods to dwell,
The holy druid saw thee rise;
And, planting there the guardian-spell,
Sung forth, the dreadful pomp to swell
Of human sacrifice!

Thy singed top and branches bare
Now straggle in the evening sky;
And the wan moon wheels round to glare
On the long corse that shivers there
Of him who came to die!

Sunday, December 16, 2018

Daily Dose

From Autumn, by Ali Smith

ONE MIGHT

"One might imagine it'd be unpleasant, being sealed in a tree. One might imagine, ah, pining. But the scent lightens despair. It's perhaps a little like wearing a coat of armour except much nicer, because the armour is made of a substance through which years themselves, formative, have run."

From Chapter Two

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Arborial Clerihew


JOYCE KILMER

On his kness
He praised the "Trees",
So, do you suppose the Scotch Fir
Sometimes thinks of Kilmer?

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Daily Dose


From Sir Walter Scott: The Great Unknown, Volume Two, by Edgar Johnson

STROLLING BACK

"Strolling back from Huntly Burn, Adolphus and Scott paused to admire some feathery saplings lining the roadway just below them.  'I like,' Scott remarked, 'that way of giving an eyelash to the road.'  Adolphus refered to the Burn as a brook; 'hardly that,' said Scott, 'it is just a runnel.'  On its tiny cascade he liked to quote Lord Holland: 'Cascade! asking the ladies pardon, I could produce a more respectable waterfall from my own person!'"

From Chapter 6, Like a Recusant Turnspit, (1827)

Monday, March 2, 2015

Daily Dose


From Japanese Death Poems, compiled by Yoel Hoffmann

NOT EVEN

"Not even for a moment
do things stand still -- witness
color in the trees.

From Seiju