Here are two Milly poems.
The WindMilly JourdainThe wind blows wild across the gray river,Against those dusky walls, and through the trees,Along the level streets.With the same voice it blows across the sea,Across those grassy fields and shadowed vales,And down the grey village.And yet again when I am nearing sleep,I hear it softly blowing through the fieldsAnd waving grass of youth.DorsetMilly JourdainI know a place where winds blow over wideWet downs, and where the yellow sheepLike stars are crowded on a steep hill side;Where palest primroses shine down the laneAnd blue-bells follow after faintly sweet,And often all the land is blurred with rain;And when the little trees are cold and bare,The lambs do cry like children in the mist,And there's no other sound in the damp air.In the dark night, when I lie on my bedIn this old town of water and gray towers,The wandering sheep-bells tinkle in my head.
Do you see why I'm getting so frustrated? Because "And when the little trees are cold and bare,/The lambs do cry like children in the mist" is stunning, while "The wandering sheep-bells tinkle in my head" is not stunning.
Argh. I don't know why I take her unevenness to heart, but I do.
2 comments:
Dear Dawn,
These Milly Jourdain's poems are frustrating--so much attention to craft--so much build up--and then...
I would say it is my own reading issues--my need for drama and cynicism towards beauty that stops me from enjoying the poems--but there is something else adding to the frustration. Jourdain's poems have a lushness that teases.
Your blog reminds me of a poem my Natasha Sajé about reading Henry James. I think her poem is very funny and might help with your own reading frustration.
Best Wishes,
Nicelle Davis
Natasha Saje: http://people.westminstercollege.edu/faculty/nsaje/READHJ.WAV
Your comments about drama and cynicism are pertinent. These are very uncynical poems, which I personally think is a great strength. I get very tired of the ironies of contemporary poetry. Their lack of drama is a different matter: not that something exciting needs to happen in a poem, but the arc of the poem must itself be dramatic. And, for the most part, these don't have that arc, that irrepressible movement toward a source. Yet the elegance of some of her imagery, as well as her subtle metrical control . . . a line in which "do cry" as opposed to "cry" alone makes me nearly want to weep--well, that's why I stay with Milly.
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