“Always be a poet, even in prose.” ~ Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867), French poet
Monday, March 21, 2011
Young Orchard
(Fruit Trees in Bloom by Claude Monet, 1840-1926, French
Impressionist painter)
Monet is famous for his series of paintings of water lilies, poplars, haystacks, and the Rouen Cathedral. Over the years, he also painted many different images of trees in blossom, including plum, olive, apple, and lemon.
YOUNG ORCHARD
These trees came to stay.
Planted at intervals of
Thirty feet each way,
Each one stands alone
Where it is to live and die.
Still, when they are grown
To full size, these trees
Will blend their crowns, and hum with
Meditating bees.
Meanwhile, see how they
Rise against their rootedness
On a gusty day,
Nodding one and all
To one another, as they
Rise again and fall,
Swept by flutterings
So that they appear a great
Consort of sweet strings.
~ Richard Wilbur, born 1921, American poet and translator
2 comments:
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Since I recently discovered your site, I come by every day. I want to let you know how very very much I have been enjoying your selections, including the lovely artwork. Many thanks to you for keeping this going!
ReplyDeleteOh, how lovely to find another poem by one of my favorites, Richard Wilbur. And as one who grew up in an orchard, I am especially taken by his subject here.
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