• Bodhisattvacharyavatara
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  • collected works
    • 25th August 1981 – count Up
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    • The Boats of Vallisneria by Michael J. Redford
    • Bob 1995-2012
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    • in and out / the Avebury stones / can’t seem to get / a signal …
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mlewisredford

~ may the Supreme and Precious Jewel Bodhichitta take birth where it has not yet done so …

mlewisredford

Tag Archives: tulip

time

19 Thursday May 2022

Posted by m lewis redford in poems

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

'scape, 2022, 7*, afternoon, birdsong, breeze, Carol, chaos, chorus, doppler, echo, Emmett's Gardens, garden, jet plane, morning, pigeons, pine, shadow, silence, sky, speech, sun, time, tulip, walls, watching

                                                an array of peaceful jet-scores
                                                across the sky never colliding
                                                welcome to Emmett’s Gardens

                                    time

                        various pine shadow of afternoon
                        away from height of morning sun
                        beyond the rose garden wall

                        held from chaos by the chorus
                        of chivourrts, ch-hwhtts and echoed pigeons
                        from the facing proscenium …

                        … ah, we’ve missed the tulips
                        just stalks top-heavy no we haven’t
                        said Carol watching them twaddle

they doppler even as we watch
between breezes some coming low
to land behind the pines

 

————w(O)rmholes________________________________|—–

afternoon wormhole: ‘in my car I pass…’
breeze & morning & speech wormhole: Journey
Carol & silence wormhole: ‘‘she shook the sweets …’
echo wormhole: travel // when I die
garden wormhole: The Boats of Vallisneria by Michael J. Redford – Rain
pigeons wormhole: municipal garden
pine wormhole: out
shadow & sky & sun wormhole: taking birth
time wormhole: the simple prayer // the tattered poem // the bitter lament
tulip wormhole: Tulips by Sylvia Plath – How Far To Step Before You Raise The Other Foot
walls wormhole: silence

https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/emmetts-garden

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Tulips by Sylvia Plath – How Far To Step Before You Raise The Other Foot

11 Monday Aug 2014

Posted by m lewis redford in poems

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

1961, 2014, 8*, air, anatta, beauty, being, books, born-again, breathing, child, compassion, contingency, death, exigence, existence, eyes, faces, family, flowers, freedom, green, hands, head, hospital, identity, journey, life, light, love, nurses, others, peace, perspective, pocket, poetry, pointlessness, reading, realisation, red, renunciation, river, Salinger, seagull, shadow, silence, sleep, smile, sun, Sylvia Plath, Tao, thinking, time, tulip, velcro, walls, white, windows, winter, wisdom, world

 

 

 

                Tulips by Sylvia Plath

                The tulips are too excitable, it is winter here.
                Look how white everything is, how quiet, how snowed-in.
                I am learning peacefulness, lying by myself quietly
                As the light lies on these white walls, this bed, these hands.
                I am nobody; I have nothing to do with explosions.
                I have given my name and my day-clothes up to the nurses
                And my history to the anesthetist and my body to surgeons.

                They have propped my head between the pillow and the sheet-cuff
                Like an eye between two white lids that will not shut.
                Stupid pupil, it has to take everything in.
                The nurses pass and pass, they are no trouble,
                They pass the way gulls pass inland in their white caps,
                Doing things with their hands, one just the same as another,
                So it is impossible to tell how many there are.

                My body is a pebble to them, they tend it as water
                Tends to the pebbles it must run over, smoothing them gently.
                They bring me numbness in their bright needles, they bring me sleep.
                Now I have lost myself I am sick of baggage——
                My patent leather overnight case like a black pillbox,
                My husband and child smiling out of the family photo;
                Their smiles catch onto my skin, little smiling hooks.

                I have let things slip, a thirty-year-old cargo boat
                stubbornly hanging on to my name and address.
                They have swabbed me clear of my loving associations.
                Scared and bare on the green plastic-pillowed trolley
                I watched my teaset, my bureaus of linen, my books
                Sink out of sight, and the water went over my head.
                I am a nun now, I have never been so pure.

                I didn’t want any flowers, I only wanted
                To lie with my hands turned up and be utterly empty.
                How free it is, you have no idea how free——
                The peacefulness is so big it dazes you,
                And it asks nothing, a name tag, a few trinkets.
                It is what the dead close on, finally; I imagine them
                Shutting their mouths on it, like a Communion tablet.

                The tulips are too red in the first place, they hurt me.
                Even through the gift paper I could hear them breathe
                Lightly, through their white swaddlings, like an awful baby.
                Their redness talks to my wound, it corresponds.
                They are subtle : they seem to float, though they weigh me down,
                Upsetting me with their sudden tongues and their color,
                A dozen red lead sinkers round my neck.

                Nobody watched me before, now I am watched.
                The tulips turn to me, and the window behind me
                Where once a day the light slowly widens and slowly thins,
                And I see myself, flat, ridiculous, a cut-paper shadow
                Between the eye of the sun and the eyes of the tulips,
                And I have no face, I have wanted to efface myself.
                The vivid tulips eat my oxygen.

                Before they came the air was calm enough,
                Coming and going, breath by breath, without any fuss.
                Then the tulips filled it up like a loud noise.
                Now the air snags and eddies round them the way a river
                Snags and eddies round a sunken rust-red engine.
                They concentrate my attention, that was happy
                Playing and resting without committing itself.

                The walls, also, seem to be warming themselves.
                The tulips should be behind bars like dangerous animals;
                They are opening like the mouth of some great African cat,
                And I am aware of my heart: it opens and closes
                Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me.
                The water I taste is warm and salt, like the sea,
                And comes from a country far away as health.

Sylvia Plath, “Tulips” from Collected Poems.   Copyright © 1960, 1965, 1971, 1981 by the Estate of Sylvia Plath.

                                              ——~ O ~

                Tulips by Sylvia Plath

I read this with a big stupid smile on a long flight from Gran Canaria.   It is the third or fourth time I have read it. Some poems open like pockets when read additionally, enfoldingly.   And make you smile, stupidly, because you hadn’t realised how much there ever is in the very same journey being made in the reading.   How much more beautiful can something become: I am beginning to understand why Seymour Glass suffered from the utter-ness of beauty – how beauty can demand your respective and perspective extinction in its unfoldment if you are not too careful.   And Seymour Glass and Sylvia Plath were not too careful – what beauty they saw, how shocking (for us) to behold … if we are not careful.

              “The tulips are too excitable …”

ah, it has started, too quick, too late for me to define myself ‘perspectived’ from it – go with it, go with it, trust Sylvia, she went with it, she had no choice, she was ill (emergency appendectomy, recent miscarriage) it will be alright, she coped, she made … Beauty

                                                                     “… it is winter here.
                Look how white everything is, how quiet, how snowed-in.
                I am learning peacefulness, lying by myself quietly
                As the light lies on these white walls, this bed, these hands …”

She let her self go, with the season and the walls and the quiet.   Relinquishing.   Liking it.   Finding a more stable existence than all of the rough contingency that perpetually leaves her off-balance. Being it: …

              “I am nobody; I have nothing to do with explosions.
                I have given my name and my day-clothes up to the nurses
                And my history to the anesthetist and my body to surgeons.”

This is not morbidity or illness, this is rest (‘I have nothing to do with explosions’ – beautiful self-humour, the past tantrums and anger dressed as sophistication).   This is relief.   This is healthy: this most wonderful, laconic humour; she lets her self go then turns to look at what is left with a detachment and indulgence that you would have for your own child:

              “They have propped my head between the pillow and the sheet-cuff
                Like an eye between two white lids that will not shut.
                Stupid pupil, it has to take everything in.”

This is so funny, and not merely because of the ‘pupil’ pun, a beautiful acceptance of how earnest those poets can be, looking at everything to take in its significance.   And having accepted herself in all her tragicomedy, what else to look at but the rest of the world:

              “The nurses pass and pass, they are no trouble,
                They pass the way gulls pass inland in their white caps,
                Doing things with their hands, one just the same as another,
                So it is impossible to tell how many there are.”

‘… doing things with their hands’, having accepted the endearing stupidity of one’s own doings, then looking at the impersonal world, but with that same love – impartially, freshly, benignedly, resignedly.   So, what have I got in my thirty-year life so far?

              “My body is a pebble to them, they tend it as water
                Tends to the pebbles it must run over, smoothing them gently.
                They bring me numbness in their bright needles, they bring me sleep.
                Now I have lost myself I am sick of baggage——
                My patent leather overnight case like a black pillbox,
                My husband and child smiling out of the family photo;
                Their smiles catch onto my skin, little smiling hooks.

                I have let things slip, a thirty-year-old cargo boat
                Stubbornly hanging on to my name and address.
                They have swabbed me clear of my loving associations.
                Scared and bare on the green plastic-pillowed trolley
                I watched my teaset, my bureaus of linen, my books
                Sink out of sight, and the water went over my head.
                I am a nun now, I have never been so pure.”

Watching all the emphemerality is where it gets uncomfortable – we’re not supposed to think this, are we?   Surely this is by what we define our value – you can’t renounce this, you can’t be born-again from this, you can’t give this up, that’s going too far!   But the realisation is implacable: you can’t lose one without the other (… the Tao that can be named, is not the eternal Tao).   If you fall short – one without the other – you lose the both.   If you grant your own lack of exigence, but not others’ lack, you lack compassion for them and your realisation is selfish and isolated.   If you grant the lack of exigence of other, but not your own, you are lost in pointlessness and your realisation is mad.   If you lack either compassion or wisdom you are foreshortened, even when whole release was so close.   This is where the carefulness is so crucial: calculated openness (which begs its own opening), or complete opening which takes no prisoners.

              “I didn’t want any flowers, I only wanted
                To lie with my hands turned up and be utterly empty.
                How free it is, you have no idea how free——
                The peacefulness is so big it dazes you,
                And it asks nothing, a name tag, a few trinkets.
                It is what the dead close on, finally; I imagine them
                Shutting their mouths on it, like a Communion tablet.”

This is not morbid, this is not just what she is about – don’t foreshorten her.   This is a great yearning for the peace of not being entrapped.

This is where Sylvia falls short.   She can embrace her own extinction as escape from her painful world (the whole universe come to a single point of bright tulips in a vase), but she cannot pervade her realisation into the world; it keeps snagging her, they keep snagging her.   Nevertheless she is so beautiful in the candour which whimpers, ‘I can’t’:

              “The tulips are too red in the first place, they hurt me.
                Even through the gift paper I could hear them breathe
                Lightly, through their white swaddlings, like an awful baby.
                Their redness talks to my wound, it corresponds.
                They are subtle: they seem to float, though they weigh me down,
                Upsetting me with their sudden tongues and their color,
                A dozen red lead sinkers round my neck.”

The others (her family, the world) are hooking onto her like Velcro; she cannot accept their non-exigency, only her own.   And to the extent that she cannot accept theirs she is losing her own self-realisation in relief, and becoming paranoid:

              “Nobody watched me before, now I am watched.
                The tulips turn to me, and the window behind me
                Where once a day the light slowly widens and slowly thins,
                And I see myself, flat, ridiculous, a cut-paper shadow
                Between the eye of the sun and the eyes of the tulips,
                And I have no face, I have wanted to efface myself.
                The vivid tulips eat my oxygen.

                Before they came the air was calm enough,
                Coming and going, breath by breath, without any fuss.
                Then the tulips filled it up like a loud noise.
                Now the air snags and eddies round them the way a river
                Snags and eddies round a sunken rust-red engine.
                They concentrate my attention, that was happy
                Playing and resting without committing itself.

                The walls, also, seem to be warming themselves.
                The tulips should be behind bars like dangerous animals;
                They are opening like the mouth of some great African cat,
                And I am aware of my heart: it opens and closes
                Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me.
                The water I taste is warm and salt, like the sea,
                And comes from a country far away as health.”

You can’t help but love the head of someone that glimpses beauty but is frightened by its implications, seemingly chained by the very things she is enamoured of in the belly of a dark cave.   I would hold her dear cranium, feel all of its connected weight …

 

 

 

————w(O)rmholes________________________________|—–

air & pointlessness wormhole: tag cloud poem VI – anyone’s eyes
beauty wormhole: old age
being & identity & poetry & shadow & thinking & world wormhole: the precision // the gentleness // and / the letting go
books & Sylvia Plath wormhole: ‘like a piece of ice on a hot stove / the poem must ride on its own melting’
breathing & love wormhole: our life
child wormhole: on
compassion wormhole: ‘n’
death & family & life wormhole: letters to Mum III – ongoing-term // eventually
eyes & reading & time wormhole: the air of architecture
faces & hands wormhole: city-centre-coffee-shop / talk
green wormhole: cold wind
light wormhole: St. Ludwigskirche
others & sun wormhole: movement
realisation wormhole: I will eventually drift tectonic
red wormhole: the poppies / of van Gogh
river & seagull wormhole: a riveral
silence wormhole: the Buddha head in an antique shop
sleep wormhole: my fidgety self
smile wormhole: no biggie:
tulip wormhole: honest
walls wormhole: deepening with each step
white wormhole: time
windows wormhole: waiting room
winter wormhole: no hat

 

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honest

01 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by m lewis redford in poems

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

'scape, 2012, 7*, being, breathing, breeze, clouds, garden, lightning, night, Shantideva, sitting, sky, tulip

 

 

 

                                          I sit
                                     and for a few
                                          precious seconds
                                     maybe even
                                          partial seconds
                                     if I’m honest

                                          I’ll breathe
                                          like a tulip

                                     without my notice
                                          or intention
                                     and ‘like a flash of lightning
                                          in the dark of night’
                                     the whole garden
                                          will shift with the breeze
                                     and theme the colour of the moment

                                          too quick
                                     to shelter from the
                                          timeless creeping penumbra
                                     a tangled grubby weave
                                          of voice and echo wide as the sky

                                          ah, but the air the air

 

 

 

————w(O)rmholes________________________________|—–

part of … oh
being wormhole: Big Mind
breathing wormhole: wakey wakey / time to get up
breeze wormhole: bench / corner of Cantwell Road / and Eglinton Hill
clouds wormhole: perched
garden wormhole: duck calls
lightning wormhole: footfall
night wormhole: write / by the / night / of the / lamp
Shantideva wormhole: self
sitting wormhole: relationship
sky wormhole: 1974 – Greens / End Woolwich
tulip wormhole: weekend

 

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weekend

09 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by m lewis redford in poems

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Tags

'scape, 2012, 3*, Central Park, green, Manhattan, park, portrait, red, roads, silver, sun, tulip, turquoise, yellow

 

 

 

                                     weekend

edge of Central Park   constant joggers   dividing poles in the road   medical response cruising flashing lights no siren   turquoise bicycle frame   tourist bus one standing up   tall boy skinny stopped constant sun-smile not sure if he should be   tulips under John Purroy Mitchell   “attention” (French) child trying to pick up whole branch to carry   silver trainers lace loops Mickey Mouse ears   couple leg-swinging holding onto traffic lights slight jiggle always green

 

 

 

————w(O)rmholes________________________________|—–

green wormhole: RENAISSANCE
Manhattan wormhole: blue walnut
park wormhole: room 506 / Central Park
red wormhole: ‘first thing / in the morning …’
roads wormhole: ‘travelled a long time …’
silver wormhole: ‘radar-blinking …’
sun wormhole: Heathrow / Airport
tulip wormhole: “WHOOOOOOOOOP!!!”
yellow wormhole: ‘before the wide …’

 

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“WHOOOOOOOOOP!!!”

13 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by m lewis redford in poems

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

'scape, 1980, 3*, buildings, city, doors, green, park, speech, tulip

 

 

 

                peacock blaze
                fiery trail
                through Manhattan
                smokey-farm
                      Bing the
                      check-jacket
                      snorts his tulip
                      “what th’…”
                “…note the –”
                “WHOOP WHOOOP”
                “WHOOOOOOOOOP!!!”

                      dancing through the park
                short arms flapping –
                Chaplin-shrugging
                      tender at the door dear
                      the knob’s alright
                      but the green paint’s lapping

 

 

 

————w(O)rmholes________________________________|—–

buildings wormhole: ‘gnashing …’
city wormhole: ‘the open-air …’
doors wormhole: hands in pockets
green wormhole: ‘small Tina at the table …’
park wormhole: 1972
speech wormhole: ‘the open window …’:

 

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… Mark; remember …

"... the impulse to keep to yourself what you have learned is not only shameful; it is destructive. Anything you do not give freely and abundantly becomes lost to you. You open your safe to find ashes." ~ Annie Dillard

pages coagulating like yogurt

  • Bodhisattvacharyavatara
    • Chapter 1
    • Chapter 10
    • Chapter 2
    • Chapter 3
    • Chapter 4
    • Chapter 5
    • Chapter 6
    • Chapter 7
    • Chapter 8
    • Chapter 9
    • Introduction
  • collected works
    • 25th August 1981 – count Up
    • askance From Hell
    • Batman
    • Bob 1995-2012
    • David Bowie Movements in Suite Major
    • Edward Hopper: Poems at an Exhibition
    • Eglinton Hill
    • FLOORBOARDS
    • Granada
    • in and out / the Avebury stones / can’t seem to get / a signal …
    • Lapping Reflections [Deep Within Waters]
    • Miller’s Batman
    • mum
    • nan
    • Portsmouth – Southsea
    • Spring Warwick breezes / over Bacharach fieldwork and boroughs with / the occasional shift and chirp of David / in the pastel-long morning of the sixties
    • The Boats of Vallisneria by Michael J. Redford
    • through the crash
  • index
    • #A-E see!
    • F–K, wha’ th’
    • L-P 33 1/3 rpm
    • Q-T pie
    • U-Z together forever
  • me
  • others
  • poemics
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  • teaching matters
  • William Carlos Williams
  • wormholes

recent leaks …

  • “…and may the great elements…”
  • paisley // implicitly
  • this pocketed being
  • the inevitable tock // when we close our eyes
  • time
  • the simple prayer // the tattered poem // the bitter lament
  • taking birth
  • mirror
  • long / road
  • ‘in my car I pass…’

Uncanny Tops

  • me
  • Moebius strip
  • YOUNG WOMAN AT A WINDOW by William Carlos Williams
  • 'in my car I pass...'
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  • like butterflies on / buddleia
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  • 'hello old friend ...'
  • under the blue and blue sky

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