Friday, August 14, 2015

All His Infinite Labouring At Bright Coincidence

[for William Butler Yeats, with reverence]

[and to Martin Burke, Irish-Belgian poet and playwright]

all his infinite labouring at bright coincidence
has long ago spun into the gold
of finer worlds than this one.

do you still read him
as the rose tinged glass,
the harp glossed marvel gone?

I wonder and then wonder endlessly
that poets after him
dared to keep on writing.

who will burn the sun into legend now;
the moon, this starlit haunted maze, into a jewelry
closer at hand too dear to us

or scan the snows of
ancient mourning
or note-
oh sons and daughters,

the floating counterpoint of the swans
on Ireland's stilled, strange waters.

I have bound these letters with a shaking hand
couching my lament in flowers from the antique gardens,
the rose ridden hours;

learning in this, my latter age and stirred beyond praise,
all minstrel lays and sheared minstrelsy itself-
tremulous, and grave to the very grave

to say to you, only:that poems like his-
we have not earned.

 mary angela douglas 14 august 2015