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April 23: W.S. Merwin’s “The Furrow”

April 23: W.S. Merwin’s “The Furrow”

From W. S. Merwin’s The Vixen, one of those poems that chases its own tail and can be read many times as we curve around the circle from its question to its near-answer and perhaps back again to consider the question…


The Furrow

Did I think it would abide as it was forever
      all that time ago the turned earth in the old garden
where I stood in spring remembering spring in another place
      that had ceased to exist and the dug roots kept giving up
their black tokens their coins and bone buttons and shoe nails
      made by hands and bits of plates as the thin clouds
of that season slipped past gray branches on which the early
      white petals were catching their light and I thought I knew
something of age then my own age which had conveyed me
      to there and the ages of the trees and the walls and houses
from before my coming and the age of the new seeds as I
      set each one in the ground to begin to remember
what to become and the order in which to return
      and even the other age into which I was passing
all the time while I was thinking of something different


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3 Responses to “April 23: W.S. Merwin’s “The Furrow””

  1. Susan says:

    Your poem showed simplicity and kept your mind wondering… I really enjoyed the read.

  2. Sherry says:

    Loved this poem!
    The wandering around and in and out whimsy was a joy to experience:)

  3. Keith McDuffie says:

    W. S. Merwin beautifully captures the sense of time and its passing (and its future–the seeds and passing “”into another age”), during which time we usually are thinking of something else, until brought up short by the evidence. Time is a very difficult concept–here Merwin gives it meaning through human experience. A marvelous poem.

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Knopf's Poem-A-Day 2010

April 1: Edward Hirsch’s “Self-portrait”
April 2: Marge Piercy’s “Seven Horses”
April 3: Dan Chiasson’s “Banquette” and “Next”
April 4: Marie Ponsot’s “Transport”
April 5: Alexander Neubauer’s Poetry in Person, featuring Derek Walcott
April 6: Mark Strand’s “Mirror”
April 7: Edna St. Vincent Millay’s “Spring”
April 8: Philip Levine’s “MY FATHERS, THE BALTIC”
April 9: Vera Pavlova’s “A Remedy for Insomnia”
April 10: Stan Rice’s “The Fragment of Statue”
April 11: Marina Tsvetayeva’s “Poems Grow”
April 12: Kevin Young’s “EYES + EGGS [1983]“
April 13: Janusz Szuber’s “About a Boy Stirring Jam”
April 14: Frank O’Hara’s “The Day Lady Died”
April 15: Franz Wright’s "My Pew"
April 16: Mary Jo Salter’s “Welcome to Hiroshima”
April 17: Yehuda Halevi’s “A man in your fifties—and you still would be young?”
April 18: Langston Hughes’s “Black Workers” and “Black Dancers”
April 19: W. S. Di Piero’s “In Our Room”
April 20: Robert Wrigley’s “Kissing a Horse”
April 21: Sharon Olds’s “When He Came for the Family” and “The Signal”
April 22: Irving Feldman’s “Stretched Out at Length”
April 23: W.S. Merwin’s “The Furrow”
April 24: David Lehman’s “Poem in the Manner of a Jazz Standard”
April 25: John Keats’s “This Living Hand”
April 26: Laurie Sheck’s A Monster’s Notes
April 27: Garrett Hongo’s “Volcano House”
April 28: Wallace Stevens’s “Large Red Man Reading”
April 29: Izumi Shikibu’s love poems
April 30: Deborah Digges's "Write a Book a Year"