A Flowering Tree: Selected Poems: Frederick Turner
A Flowering Tree: Selected Poems: Frederick Turner
A Flowering Tree: Selected Poems: Frederick Turner
Selected Poems
Frederick Turner
A Flowering Tree:
Selected Poems
Frederick Turner
Acknowledgements
The cover art is a painting by the British painter David Andrew,
entitled The Mount from Marazion. My thanks to the artist.
On Gibbs Law, The Blackness of the Grackle, Spring
Evening, To Ariadne, and On the Pains of Translating Mikls
Radnti were published in April Wind (University Press of
Virginia, 1991). The Dolphin Hotel and Epcot Center, North
Sea Storm, Sestina upon the Cosmological Anthropic Principle,
and On the Precolumbian Zero are from Hadean Eclogues, Story
Line Press, 1999. .com , Prouts Neck, Maine, The Ladys
Impatience, The Slave Forgers, View from the Metroliner,
On the Funeral of Princess Diana, Teacher Who Killed Sons
Dejected, To Milton, Habits, and To All my Friends are
from Paradise: Selected Poems, 1990-2003. Terminus was
published in First Things, 161 (March 2006); it is from a new
sonnet sequence, entitled The Undiscovered Country: Sonnets of a
Wayfarer.
Contents
On Gibbs Law 5
The Blackness of the Grackle 6
Spring Evening 8
To Ariadne 9
On the Pains of Translating Miklos Radnoti 10
The Dolphin Hotel and Epcot Center 12
North Sea Storm 13
Sestina Upon the Cosmological Anthropic Principle
On the Precolumbian Zero 17
.com 18
Prouts Neck, Maine 19
The Ladys Impatience 20
The Slave Forgers 21
View from the Metroliner 22
On the Funeral of Princess Diana 23
Teacher Who Killed Sons Dejected 24
To Milton 25
Habits 27
Terminus
28
To All My Friends 29
15
On Gibbs Law
If hot solution, saturate,
Be set upon a ledge to cool,
Rayed crystals will precipitate
On dust no thicker than a molecule;
When the slow chilling of the night
Crosses the threshold of the freeze
The stars shine out as sharp and bright
As frostflowers in their fractal vortices;
The first white gas that was the world,
To ease the heat and press of birth,
Froze into forms as it unfurled:
The starry galaxies, the living earth;
Such pressure drives this crystal trance,
This thickening of art and hour,
Where order tumbles from the dance
Of dying syllables and forms a flower.
Spring Evening
Above the baby-powder clouds
The sky is china blue.
Soon, young and chattering, the crowds
Of stars come pushing through.
And this is the first dispensation,
The setting up of the odds;
This is the eve of creation,
This is the time of the gods.
To Ariadne
I am your elder lover.
I know not what to say.
What image could recover
your manner and your way?
For what is like you, who
are colored like all things,
Taking their colors to
the dark quilt of your wings?
Should I describe your speech,
whose thousandth part might be
Fractioned again, and each
more branched than any tree?
When nothing that you are
speaks openly or free,
How may so dark a star
be guaged by one like me?
My elder mistress, you
resemble but one kind:
The winding of the clue,
the labyrinth of mind.
11
12
14
16
17
.com
The merce in commerce is a hidden god.
Mercury flows through fiber-optic nerves
Billions of floating points in every second:
The market breaks and rallies, shrinks and swerves,
Its operations complex, rich, and fecund,
Its dark thought unimaginably odd.
There he is, youthful, in his petasus,
Sandalled with wings, golden, light-spirited,
And in his hand the snaked caduceus,
Wherewith he joins the living and the dead.
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
To Milton
Milton, you are too greatly with us still.
Better than any, you knew Paradise,
And knew it pagan, sweet, arcadian.
In Englands green and pleasant land we might
Have planted groves to Pan, to Vishnu, Jove,
To Quetzalcoatli and the Bodhisattvas;
And the rich cream thats milked from Englands meadows
Might have drenched strawberries of happiness,
Of painted genius, music, theater.
Your pen wrote Cromwell into being, and drove
Titania, Thammuz, Proserpine away
Wailing among the shades of Hades, drove
Our English grammar into iron rails,
Drove out hypocrisy and Robert Herrick,
Plucked off the white plume from Prince Ruperts helm,
Murdered the Irish in their poor green glens,
And brought the axe down on King Charless neck.
You brought Augustines tearful self-concern,
Saint Pauls sincerity, and Luthers scorn,
And closed the theaters where Shakespeare played.
So powerful was thy "Thou" that after thee
No servant, lover, pupil or enemy
Might ever know himself to be a Thou
And the world faded into common "you".
And I am faithful to you yet, my noble Milton.
Your parliament became my nations House,
Your Protestant right reason gave me science,
Your published epic wrote my role of poet.
No one wept more than you did when the axe
Of northern freedom and ressentiment
25
26
Habits
First we make them,
Then we break them,
Then we make ourselves anew;
Were completed,
Self-conceited,
Find theres one thing left to do:
Break the habit
Of the habit,
Let ourselves be made by You.
27
Terminus
Behind the corner, over that far hill
Where the last train pulls into the last station
And steam expires into the gold dusk chill
Thats Peace Of Mind, the final destination.
And somewhere up ahead, the traveler,
Who now must haul his bag up on his shoulder,
Knows theres a place nearby where old friends are,
Friends who are never getting any older:
Some kind of cottage with a southwest view,
A kitchen-garden, as the mail insisted,
Grape-arbor, and an outdoor barbecue.
Who might have thought that such a place existed?
Halfway he stops and looks back with a sigh.
A plume of smoke still towers in the sky.
28
To All My Friends
That day we shall have time to ramble all day long,
Drink through the evening without drunkenness,
Stroll in the market and choose the best aubergines,
Read and reread each others manuscripts,
Cook complicated meals with stocks and seething-pans,
Split seasoned logs and set them for a fire,
Draw each others portraits, finish the argument,
Tell fortunes, label the old photographs,
Make fun of all each others worst absurdities,
Disagree violently on films and plays,
And wake at dawn to pull on heavy hiking boots.
And in that place, my very dear good friends,
There will be mountaintops and bays and woods and breezes,
And little theaters and haciendas,
And bougainvillaea that covers up the dark verandas,
And olive groves and palms and fields of wheat.
This will be the place of free time, the place of death,
The sweet suburb of everlasting life.
The star that warms it will light up the giant orb
Of which this is the moon. Friends, until then,
Forgive my anxious travels and my vicious stress,
My rare and hurried letters, my duress,
My distantness, the flickering of my eyes.
Ive not forgotten our old happiness.
29
A Flowering Tree:
Selected Poems
Frederick Turner, Professor of Arts and
Humanities at the University of Texas at
Dallas, was educated at Oxford
University. A poet, critic, translator,
philosopher, and former editor of The
Kenyon Review, he has authored 27
books, including The Culture of Hope,
Genesis, Hadean Eclogues, Shakespeares
Twenty-First
Century
Economics,
Paradise, and Natural Religion.