She is Fierce

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She is Fierce Page 7

by Ana Sampson


  On foot

  I wandered through the solar systems,

  before I found the first thread of my red dress.

  Already I have a sense of myself.

  Somewhere in space my heart hangs,

  emitting sparks, shaking the air,

  to other immeasurable hearts.

  Edith Södergran

  Translated by Malena Mörling and Jonas Ellerström

  The Orange

  At lunchtime I bought a huge orange –

  The size of it made us all laugh.

  I peeled it and shared it with Robert and Dave –

  They got quarters and I had a half.

  And that orange, it made me so happy,

  As ordinary things often do

  Just lately. The shopping. A walk in the park.

  This is peace and contentment. It’s new.

  The rest of the day was quite easy.

  I did all the jobs on my list

  And enjoyed them and had some time over.

  I love you. I’m glad I exist.

  Wendy Cope

  New Every Morning

  Every day is a fresh beginning,

  Listen my soul to the glad refrain.

  And, spite of old sorrows

  And older sinning,

  Troubles forecasted

  And possible pain,

  Take heart with the day and begin again.

  Susan Coolidge

  If Once You Have Slept on an Island

  If once you have slept on an island

  You’ll never be quite the same;

  You may look as you looked the day before

  And go by the same old name,

  You may bustle about in street and shop

  You may sit at home and sew,

  But you’ll see blue water and wheeling gulls

  Wherever your feet may go.

  You may chat with the neighbors of this and that

  And close to your fire keep,

  But you’ll hear ship whistle and lighthouse bell

  And tides beat through your sleep.

  Oh! you won’t know why and you can’t say how

  Such a change upon you came,

  But once you have slept on an island,

  You’ll never be quite the same.

  Rachel Field

  Full Moon

  She was wearing coral taffeta trousers

  Someone had brought her from Isfahan,

  And the little gold coat with pomegranate blossoms,

  And the coral-hafted feather fan,

  But she ran down a Kentish lane in the moonlight,

  And skipped in the pool of moon as she ran.

  She cared not a rap for all the big planets,

  For Betelgeuse or Aldebaran,

  And all the big planets cared nothing for her,

  That small impertinent charlatan,

  But she climbed on a Kentish stile in the moonlight,

  And laughed at the sky through the sticks of her fan.

  Vita Sackville-West

  Seven Times One: Exultation

  There’s no dew left on the daisies and clover,

  There’s no rain left in heaven:

  I’ve said my ‘seven times’ over and over,

  Seven times one are seven.

  I am old, so old, I can write a letter;

  My birthday lessons are done;

  The lambs play always, they know no better;

  They are only one times one.

  O moon! in the night I have seen you sailing

  And shining so round and low.

  You were bright! ah bright! but your light is failing –

  You are nothing now but a bow.

  You moon! have you done something wrong in heaven

  That God has hidden your face?

  I hope if you have you will soon be forgiven,

  And shine again in your place.

  O velvet bee, you’re a dusty fellow,

  You’ve powdered your legs with gold!

  O brave marsh marybuds, rich and yellow,

  Give me your money to hold!

  O columbine, open your folded wrapper,

  Where two twin turtle-doves dwell!

  O cuckoopint, toll me the purple clapper

  That hangs in your clear green bell!

  And show me your nest with the young ones in it;

  I will not steal them away;

  I am old! you may trust me, linnet, linnet –

  I am seven times one today.

  Jean Ingelow

  Today

  TODAY I will not live up to my potential.

  TODAY I will not relate well to my peer group.

  TODAY I will not contribute in class.

  I will not volunteer one thing.

  TODAY I will not strive to do better.

  TODAY I will not achieve or adjust or grow enriched or get involved.

  I will not put my hand up even if the teacher is wrong and I can prove it.

  TODAY I might eat the eraser off my pencil.

  I’ll look at clouds.

  I’ll be late.

  I don’t think I’ll wash.

  I NEED A REST.

  Jean Little

  Freedom

  Give me the long, straight road before me,

  A clear, cold day with a nipping air,

  Tall, bare trees to run on beside me,

  A heart that is light and free from care.

  Then let me go! – I care not whither

  My feet may lead, for my spirit shall be

  Free as the brook that flows to the river,

  Free as the river that flows to the sea.

  Olive Runner

  To Sleep, Possum to Dream

  possum descending a stairwell ) a stepladder

  numbers of sleep rounded up ) possum defending

  sealed caves of seal-sheep ) sea-clouds ) here merely daisies

  ) telling a petalled profusion of slumbering

  possum ) enamelled ) possum logging out early

  possum without compass seeks haystacks in haystacks

  thorough innavigable cringly acres

  impossumble n ’est pas français a possum’s nest

  nest pas français a possum cantabile

  possum untrainable ) the nest unscheduled stop

  the nest is silence ) the deepest possumism

  ) opossum knows possum wakes only for possum

  so accordingly all possumbilities hold . . .

  Vahni Capildeo

  Submerged

  I have known only my own shallows –

  Safe, plumbed places,

  Where I was wont to preen myself.

  But for the abyss

  I wanted a plank beneath

  And horizons . . .

  I was afraid of the silence

  And the slipping toe-hold . . .

  Oh, could I now dive

  Into the unexplored deeps of me –

  Delve and bring up and give

  All that is submerged, encased, unfolded,

  That is yet the best.

  Lola Ridge

  The Moon in Your Hands

  If you take the moon in your hands

  and turn it round

  (heavy, slightly tarnished platter)

  you’re there;

  if you pull dry sea-weed from the sand

  and turn it round,

  and wonder at the underside’s bright amber,

  your eyes

  look out as they did here,

  (you don’t remember)

  when my soul turned round,

  perceiving the other-side of everything,

  mullein-leaf, dogwood-leaf, moth-wing

  and dandelion-seed under the ground.

  H.D.

  You Who Want

  You who want

  knowledge,

  seek the Oneness

  within

  There you

  will find

  the clear mirror

 
already waiting.

  Hadewijch of Antwerp

  Boats in the Bay

  I will take my trouble and wrap it in a blue handkerchief

  And carry it down to the sea.

  The sea is as smooth as silk, is as silent as glass;

  It does not even whisper

  Only the boats, rowed out by the girls in yellow

  Ruffle its surface.

  It is grey, not blue. It is flecked with boats like midges,

  With happy people

  Moving soundlessly over the level water.

  I will take my trouble and drop it into the water

  It is heavy as stone and smooth as a sea-washed pebble.

  It will sink under the sea, and the happy people

  Will row over it quietly, ruffling the clear water

  Little dark boats like midges, skimming silently

  Will pass backwards and forwards, the girls singing;

  They will never know that they have sailed above sorrow.

  Sink heavily and lie still, lie still my trouble.

  Winifred Holtby

  Three Good Things

  At day’s end I remember

  three good things.

  Apples maybe – their skinshine smell

  and soft froth of juice.

  Water maybe – the pond in the park

  dark and full of secret fish.

  A mountain maybe – that I saw in a film,

  or climbed last holiday,

  and suddenly today it thundered up

  into a playground game.

  Or else an owl – I heard an owl today,

  and I made bread.

  My head is full of all these things,

  it’s hard to choose just three.

  I let remembering fill me up

  with all good things

  so that good things will overflow

  into my sleeping self,

  and in the morning

  good things will be waiting

  when I wake.

  Jan Dean

  There Is No Frigate Like a Book

  There is no Frigate like a Book

  To take us Lands away,

  Nor any Coursers like a Page

  Of prancing Poetry –

  This Travel may the poorest take

  Without offence of Toll –

  How frugal is the Chariot

  That bears the Human soul.

  Emily Dickinson

  This Poem . . .

  This poem is dangerous: it should not be left

  Within the reach of children, or even of adults

  Who might swallow it whole, with possibly

  Undesirable side-effects. If you come across

  An unattended, unidentified poem

  In a public place, do not attempt to tackle it

  Yourself. Send it (preferably, in a sealed container)

  To the nearest centre of learning, where it will be rendered

  Harmless, by experts. Even the simplest poem

  May destroy your immunity to human emotions.

  All poems must carry a Government warning. Words

  Can seriously affect your heart.

  Elma Mitchell

  Uppity

  Roads around mountains

  ’cause we can’t drive

  through

  That’s Poetry

  to Me.

  Eileen Myles

  Stanzas

  Often rebuked, yet always back returning

  To those first feelings that were born with me,

  And leaving busy chase of wealth and learning

  For idle dreams of things which cannot be:

  Today, I will not seek the shadowy region;

  Its unsustaining vastness waxes drear;

  And visions rising, legion after legion,

  Bring the unreal world too strangely near.

  I’ll walk, but not in old heroic traces,

  And not in paths of high morality,

  And not among the half-distinguished faces,

  The clouded forms of long-past history.

  I’ll walk where my own nature would be leading:

  It vexes me to choose another guide:

  Where the grey flocks in ferny glens are feeding;

  Where the wild wind blows on the mountain side.

  What have these lonely mountains worth revealing?

  More glory and more grief than I can tell:

  The earth that wakes one human heart to feeling

  Can centre both the worlds of Heaven and Hell.

  Emily Brontë

  Antidote to the Fear of Death

  Sometimes as an antidote

  To fear of death,

  I eat the stars.

  Those nights, lying on my back,

  I suck them from the quenching dark

  Till they are all, all inside me,

  Pepper hot and sharp.

  Sometimes, instead, I stir myself

  Into a universe still young,

  Still warm as blood:

  No outer space, just space,

  The light of all the not yet stars

  Drifting like a bright mist,

  And all of us, and everything

  Already there

  But unconstrained by form.

  And sometimes it’s enough

  To lie down here on earth

  Beside our long ancestral bones:

  To walk across the cobble fields

  Of our discarded skulls,

  Each like a treasure, like a chrysalis,

  Thinking: whatever left these husks

  Flew off on bright wings.

  Rebecca Elson

  ‘Phenomenal woman’ – Society, Fashion and Body Image

  Here are poems about navigating society, and the face – and body – we present to the world. Not all of them are sisterly and supportive: bitter rivalry drips from the pens of Dorothy Parker and ‘Ephelia’. (The eighteenth century in particular delivered some wonderfully spiteful poetry by men and women alike.) Women have always suffered stricter social constraints than their male counterparts, and here they condemn the straitjacket of decorum and dress. Anna Wickham, writing soon after the heyday of corsets and crinolines, laments the ‘trailing gown’ that hampers her beloved, and Selina Nwulu’s warrior woman edits her wardrobe before battle.

  Dora Greenwell beautifully captures the agonies of shyness, and Sylvia Plath probes the fear of ageing in a glossy world that prizes female beauty and youth. Here too, though, are writers rejoicing in themselves, forgiving their imperfect legs in defiance of magazine messaging and embracing wobbling armfuls of remembered pleasure. Cellulite and lightning-bolt stretchmarks don’t daunt phenomenal women. Mythical Andromeda is reimagined here, sturdy enough to unchain herself, shrugging off the sea-monster without requiring rescue.

  Phenomenal Woman

  Pretty women wonder where my secret lies.

  I’m not cute or built to suit a fashion model’s size

  But when I start to tell them,

  They think I’m telling lies.

  I say,

  It’s in the reach of my arms,

  The span of my hips,

  The stride of my step,

  The curl of my lips.

  I’m a woman

  Phenomenally.

  Phenomenal woman,

  That’s me.

  I walk into a room

  Just as cool as you please,

  And to a man,

  The fellows stand or

  Fall down on their knees.

  Then they swarm around me,

  A hive of honey bees.

  I say,

  It’s the fire in my eyes,

  And the flash of my teeth,

  The swing in my waist,

  And the joy in my feet.

  I’m a woman

  Phenomenally.

  Phenomenal woman,

  That’s me.

  Men themselves have wondered

  What they see in me.


  They try so much

  But they can’t touch

  My inner mystery.

  When I try to show them,

  They say they still can’t see.

  I say,

  It’s in the arch of my back,

  The sun of my smile,

  The ride of my breasts,

  The grace of my style.

  I’m a woman

  Phenomenally.

  Phenomenal woman,

  That’s me.

  Now you understand

  Just why my head’s not bowed.

  I don’t shout or jump about

  Or have to talk real loud.

  When you see me passing,

  It ought to make you proud.

  I say,

  It’s in the click of my heels,

  The bend of my hair,

  the palm of my hand,

  The need for my care.

  ’Cause I’m a woman

  Phenomenally.

  Phenomenal woman,

  That’s me.

  Maya Angelou

  Lullaby

  Sleep, pretty lady, the night is enfolding you;

  Drift, and so lightly, on crystalline streams

  Wrapped in its perfumes, the darkness is holding you;

  Starlight bespangles the way of your dreams.

  Chorus the nightingales, wistfully amorous;

  Blessedly quiet, the blare of the day.

  All the sweet hours may your visions be glamorous –

  Sleep, pretty lady, as long as you may.

  Sleep, pretty lady, the night shall be still for you;

  Silvered and silent, it watches you rest.

  Each little breeze, in its eagerness, will for you

  Murmur the melodies ancient and blest.

  So in the midnight does happiness capture us;

  Morning is dim with another day’s tears.

  Give yourself sweetly to images rapturous –

  Sleep, pretty lady, a couple of years.

  Sleep, pretty lady, the world awaits day with you;

  Girlish and golden, the slender young moon.

 

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