Friday, March 3, 2023

The White Lady



by Brett Rutherford

Part Four of "A Northumbrian Wedding"

And now I turn, and facing me,
the polar opposite of the old invader
and his dragon visage, there stands
tall as an oak, The White Lady.

I see, again, the black-hued rats,
how dark they clot the landscape,
blotting with sable hues the fields of wheat,
spoiling the grape, and the apple harvest.

She sings with flute-like tone, “Away! Away!”
The rats stop. She waves her hand
toward the River Tyne below, to where
the rich groom’s yacht
     has shouldered out the fisher-boats.

“Away! Away!” she cries,
and the rats surge up below us,
flooding the gangplank to vanish
into the yacht’s interior. As fast
as they had come, the dark wave
of pestilence thins out, is gone.
Packed they must be in every inch
of space below the decks, all but
invisible steerage passengers,
bound like their predecessor rodents
to teeming Manhattan. “Away! Away!”
she sings again, and all
are gone and still.

                                I swoon at this,
and without knowing how, I find myself
again in the company of one
whose feet are lily-pads, who then
returned me to the wedding hall.

The bride is lovely. None seem
to notice that her pristine gown
is made entirely of small, white mice.
The groom’s cloak seems full
of raven wings and clinging martlets.
Beaks, snouts, and claws reach out
at wedding cake and goblets.
All is as planned, and as my
crisply engraved invite presaged.
Guests come in the guise of animals.
As merry it is as a Furry convention.
Though no one is drunk, the dancing
grows more and more wild as sun
sinks and a silver moon rises.

Who said that Northumberland is stern,
has never been to a Robson-Rutherford Wedding!

 

 

March 3, 2023, from a preceding night’s dream.


Lord Rutherford's Castle


 

by Brett Rutherford

Part Three of "A Northumbrian Wedding"

As crowds flow past and into the banquet hall,
I find myself alone. The barred door
of the castle keep, bronze studded with iron,
forbids my passage. I knock
my umbrella against its dark shielding.
A hollow booming echoes back — I dread
that Lord Rutherford, my cousin drear,
as much averse to weddings as to funerals,
will come running in his bathrobe,
or that some chain-mailed retainer
will pull the vast door ajar and menace
me with the very sword we brought
into this land from Flanders. But no,
my knock presumptuous just fades away.

I spy a lesser door, and stones
whose curious hand-holds pose
a challenge like some Chinese puzzle box.
Somehow my hands know where
to put themselves. With ease,
one cornerstone pulls out; the door
on a spring’d hinge just opens itself,
and in and up I go. My feet
know when to tread, and where
exactly one must side-step so as
to miss a plummeting to brain-dash.
As quick as a rabbit racing, I find
myself at the castle’s high precipice,
standing on checkerboard flagstones.

A rude stone sculpture, crumbling
and eaten away by ivy, rears up,
half-man, half-dragon, but faces in,
as though to guard from eyes the view —

And what I see! Oh, words
for once have almost failed me.
A horizon high, impossibly so,
two rivers meeting, and on
its level island, white and gold,
three towers by time unchanged:

a cathedral as new as on the day
it was completed, rainbow-hued
as its multi-colored windows
gleam brighter than the sun
without; a great, good hall
to shelter the merchant arts and serve
workman, lords, scholars and clerks;
and higher than both, a castle
beyond the dream of fairy-tales
with trees and hanging gardens blessed,
a place of neither strife nor war.



Rats at the Wedding

 by Brett Rutherford

Part Two of "A Northumbrian Wedding"


I have come
for the Robson-Rutherford wedding.
The inn’s last room is mine,
secured by my distant-cousin status.
My room overlooks the Tyne.
The castle beyond is all a-stir,
the grand hall packed with visitors.

Yet the old keep and its twisted turret
is barred and closed.
     Lord Rutherford forbids
the tread of curious idlers
upon its steep unbannistered steps,
windows unpaned; uneven-floored
the crenellated tower-top is, where
one might plummet to the very dungeon.

I pass a train depot and shelter
whose sign points out
the way to London, Edinburgh,
Paris, and Rome, though no one
seems to come or go
by either train or autobus. Indeed,
a colony of wharf-rats, obscenely fat
have taken residence on every bench
and nest in piles of yellow ticket stubs.

“Don’t mind them,” Lady Robson advises.
“As she is marrying an American,
the silly creature, we’ve drawn the rats.
Off to New York they go, and not
a moment too soon for Northumberland.”
This is an elder lady’s fantasy, I guess.

How such a Pied-Piper feat could be
accomplished was beyond my figuring.

Assuredly the rats are here for cake,
like all the distant relatives come on
with smiling insincerity and gifts
(white elephants that rotate fete to fete).

Rats, rice, and diamonds, the stuff
of weddings since ancient times.



A Gift of Daffodils

 by Brett Rutherford

Part One of "A Northumbrian Wedding"

1.

A Gift of Daffodils

“I was given the gift of daffodils.” —
“How sad,” I say. “So brief a bloom
despite the glory they bring for a day.” —
“Come see,” the old one, smiling, says.

She puts her apron aside and rises,
strutting the cobblestones on spindly legs.
Her feet, I see, end not in shoes
but wide-spread lily pads. Duck feet
could not be more sure of tread
as she led me to the shaded wall
beneath St. Cuthbert’s church. There,
tiny narcissus-daffodils peeped up.
“That’s fine,” said I, “but in a week
the petals fade and fall. Yon rose
blooms over and over again. Mistress,
I shall gift you a bed of roses.” —

“Nay, sir, with daffodils I stay,
for what I plant here, blazons
above.” Just then, as I looked up,
the organ pealed in all its octaves
and light filled from within
the ancient, stained-glass window,
not a saints suffering, or Christ a-cross,
but an endless vista of gold
and white athwart green spears,
twenty feet high and every inch
a portrait of exploding daffodils.

Wednesday, March 1, 2023

Woe to Bayonne, New Jersey

by Brett Rutherford

In my dreams last night,
I attempted to get
to Bayonne, New Jersey.
I do not drive. The road
to Bayonne has no sidewalks.
By train, by bus,
I had to get to Bayonne, New Jersey,
I have never been
to Bayonne, New Jersey.
Woe unto those who dwell
in Bayonne, New Jersey!
Bayonnis and Bayonettes,
your days are numbered!
Whom should I seek
in Bayonne, New Jersey?
Am I to rescue them
or am I the doom
they have dreaded
since the first Bayonne
sunrise greeted them?
Alas for Bayonne, New Jersey!
Do sandwich-sign men
tread the main streets
and announce my coming?
Are there churches
in Bayonne, New Jersey?
Do their bells peal
to warn the citizens
of my arrival? Hands
over eyes, hands over
the ears of the children,
hands reaching for guns,
is their defense adequate
against the moment
I cross the town line
and breathe deep
the chemical fragrance
of Bayonne, New Jersey?

Will ghost flames flare
at the old refinery?
Will the low howl
of tanker horns shake
the port of Bayonne?
The words I utter
will be their undoing.
I am worse
than an unwelcome
immigrant, more
dangerous than a scout
from an off-shore pirate
schooner. I, alone,
asking for nothing,
threaten all.
I have written a book.
Woe to Bayonne,
New Jersey!
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Monday, February 20, 2023

Saturday, February 18, 2023

KangXi Drinks Tea From His Porcelain Eggshell Teacups

KangXi Emperor, Age 45.

by Brett Rutherford

Adapted and expanded from the paintings and poems on twelve Qing Dynasty teacups.

FIRST MONTH

Snow comes, but so too,
the early blossoms,

plum, while down below
the delicate narcissus

buds up among the
bamboo, indestructible.
My sheltered courtyard
encourages such early
arrivals, out of season.

Nature, I ask,
or sly gardening?

Even when all is still,
fragrance moves on its own
from branch to ground,
along the cold rocks,
and then inside
to the teacup’s rim.

 


SECOND MONTH

Evening rain pelts
the abundant flowers
on the apricot trees.

Their stamens radiate
attentive tendrils alert
to every falling drop.

Sunshine or mist
paint watercolor

upon the pale hue
of the white petals.

Am I smelling them,
or does the rain wear
a subtle perfume,
enchanting, seducing
me to put down the teacup,
disrobe, and walk
in the gentle downpour?

 

THIRD MONTH

Peach blossoms should really
employ a whole orchestra
to boom out good news
with their coming.

In Heaven, the peaches bloom
and bear fruit at the same time,

the food the monkeys covet
which makes the gods immortal.

Peach blossoms should fall
with gongs and drums,
alerting the farmers
to renew their labors,
and calling back
the welcome song-birds.

To drink tea beneath
a grove of tall and blossoming
peaches, requires company.
An emperor-to-be
invites two heroes
to drink and swear oaths
of eternal brotherhood.

The peach is the witness
to their youth and honor.

 




FOURTH MONTH

One must be up at dawn
to see the sly peony
untighten its grasp
on night, and drink
the dew of the immortals.

Once it has opened in full,
one almost faints
at how it makes a sphere
of petals a rose would die
to emulate, how ants
come climbing up the stems
to do it worship.

Only the finest
and most intricate
scholar’s stone
is worthy to stand
beside the peony,
a sculpture carved
by wind and water,
carried from afar
to be one peony tree’s
shade, shelter, and
companion.

An emperor seeks
one such, among
his counselors.
The maddening scent
mocks those who work
in the Jade Hall, where
wisdom is sought.
In vain.

 

FIFTH MONTH

Heavy as rocks,
the pomegranates hang
from their sturdy tree.
Yellow spheres aburst
with wet red seeds,
will ripen and blush
at their own abundance.

Their silhouettes,
as I drink tea,
wave back and forth
on the white-washed wall
behind me. The seeds
as plentiful as bees
in a hive, cannot
be counted. Taste
pomegranate, and tea
is, for a moment,
forgotten. It is
the garden’s concubine.

 


SIXTH MONTH

Look down below!
Who notices, in mud,
the lowly lotus root
like unearthed jade?
Yet when it bursts to bloom
the whole world worships it.

Two mandarin ducks
swim in the pond.
Their adoration
of the lotus flower
is in the way small waves
make furrows out
beneath their feet,
the small bows
of bill to water.

Only the crane,
from its cloud-perch
can see the symmetry
of lotus, water, shore,
the two brown ducks,
and one aged and lanky
Emperor, cup in hand.

 

SEVENTH MONTH

I sit. I have my tea.

All wish me well,
or so they say.
A seventh cup
they place before me.
Pale tea moves
second-hand as water
boils, goes through
the yi xing teapot

(mine alone),

and into the eggshell
porcelain. No hand
but mine has touched it.
All wish me well,
but there is always poison
to worry about.
Mistrust of doctors, too,
if any of them
have better friends,
and younger,
than my Imperial self.

This cup is adorned
with the most reliable
flower: the rose.
Although its heady
oil, perfume’s bounty,
makes me sneeze,

I respect its tenacity.
Outliving winters,
indifferent gardeners,
and even dark
conspiracies,
one shade against
another fratricide,

it just keeps going on.

Just as this emperor
goes on from year to year
outliving all prophecies

the tough rose
blooms anytime
it pleases.

 


EIGHTH MONTH

Just as the hare
has many progeny,
the guihua tree,

osmanthus, from
the far-off Himalayas,
flowers and branches
endlessly, spring,
winter, and fall.

An evergreen,
and fragrant too,
it flavors a tea
and an autumn wine
the Emperor is known
to savor in private.

Two things at least,
the world shall never
run out of: rabbits
and guihua trees.

 


NINTH MONTH

O Chrysanthemum,
the only way
to enjoy you,
is with a wine-cup
in hand. Oh, very well,

the Emperor may hold
his favored tea-cup full
of tea made from dried
chrysanthemum petals,

while everyone else
goes mad with its liquor.
Nature joins in.
Insane butterflies
flutter about, bees faint
with overdose of pollen.

Two hands, two eyes
are not enough
to paint the things
chrysanthemums
make happen.

A thousand year’s memories
crowd into one day
of sun-burst petals.

 

TENTH MONTH

Indoors,
among the orchids,
the Emperor takes tea,
on the day of many
bloomings. Stubborn,
the pampered ladies
withhold their colors,
refuse to unfurl
their sumptuous hoods.

Unlike the concubines
who come when summoned,
the orchids, keep close
and treasured just as much
as ladies of high families,

cling to rock and branch,
shy and particular.

And then, one day,
the eunuchs come running:

They are ready, Majesty,
the orchids are blooming!

 

ELEVENTH MONTH

Unable to sleep,
the Emperor walks,
unseen,
and unaccompanied
by guard or eunuch,
in a sheltered garden.

Is that Narcissus
he sees in moonlight,
breaking the soil
like waves against a dike?
Will they bloom so soon?

Dare they?  Is this
the Daoist gardener’s
laboratory, where plants
are made to bloom at will,
a fox-fairy’s paradise?

At sudden turn, he sees
the old gardener, lamp
in hand, who, horrified
to face his master,
trembles and begins
the humbling know-tow.

“Stand, you old magician,”
the Emperor intones.
“You have not seen me.
I was not here. Those were not
flowers seen too soon.

I have had entirely
too much tea.”



TWELFTH MONTH

Out and about
when he should not have been,
the Emperor paced
in a poorly-heated room,
hands cupping
the small tea-cup
as much for warmth
as for the taking
of such a small dose
of reality.

His feet trampled frost.
His eyes took in
the beauteous pattern
of ice on flagstones,
the tendril’d snow
at grass’s edge.

The sun had risen.
The abundant blossoms
of wintersweet lit up
with the morning’s own
gold. Not a leaf
in sight, but all those
petals sprung
from out bare branches.

How rare among
the flowering trees
was this, which bloomed
defiantly
while others shivered,
barren, for warmer days.

 

EPILOGUE

Twelve cups,
in a rosewood cabinet,
each for a lunar month.
On delicate eggshell
porcelain, so thin
that light shines through,
an artist painted such scenes,
and a poet described them
calligraphy beneath the glaze.

The cup was for
one drinker only. He,
the Son of Heaven,
ate all his meals alone,
drank tea alone —
not from the coarse cups
seen at the state banquets —
from these small, footed,
porcelain bowls.

With the rising of each moon,
one cup was taken
discreetly away
and replaced with the next.


Thursday, February 16, 2023

At the Tomb of Sophocles



by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Simias, The Greek Anthology, vii, 21 and 22


Just as the ivy twines
over this tombstone gracefully,
and just as roses bloom here,
snowing their petals pink
across your graven name,
and just as the grape,
from the adjacent arbor
sends out its grasping tendrils,
just so did word and phrase
bloom out in perfect diction
from your tongue and pen,
Great Sophocles, the favorite
of actors and auditors.

One tomb, and so little
earth -- so small a stage
they have afforded you
dead, the tragic Muse's
Attic north-star --
clings to a clod of soil.

Sing on, immortal voice
with words so strong
they burn the soul.

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Our Diminished Company


by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Diogenes Laertius, The Greek Anthology, vii, 104, 105, 111, 112, 116

If drinkers and reprobates seem
fewer among us, if taverns
seem quieter, there is a cause.
Archiselaus, for one,
drank so much wine
he lost his senses. How
can one serve the Muse,
mouth open, words
rising invisible
to empty air, to die
with no last words?
Gone just like that!

Lycades, too,
fell down in a stupor.
Out of the wine keg
Bacchus reached forth
and dragged him down,
toes first, to Hades.
Strato's gone, too. The son
of pudgy Lampsacus
was the thinnest man ever
to lift a wine-cup.
So thin he grew,
that when some grim
and wasting fever came,
he never felt it.
One moment here,
next moment gone.

Remember Lyco, so
crippled by gout
he had to arrive
on a litter
his slaves carried,
ever so much
like a pig on a platter?
He died mid-feast,
and he who came
on others' feet,
ran on his own
to cold Hades.

Diogenes we lost.
No one knew where.
We lit a lamp.
The ground we beat
with gong and staff.
We drank and sang:
"Diogenes! Where?" —
The answer came
from below below:
"Alas, in Hades now." —
"Wherefore and why?" —
"My shame! For nothing!
I fell down drunk.
One fierce dog's bite
quite finished me.
Good bye to all!"

If in water, a little wine,
no harm, and more the morrow.
But if your drink is watered not,
such fools as these, you join in sorrow.



Lament for Orpheus

Death of Orpheus, Jean Delville, 1893


by Brett Rutherford

     Adapted from Antipater of Sidon, The Greek Anthology, vii, 8

Orpheus, who once
the very oaks, and
rocks they stood upon,
made stand upright
and dance, whose voice
called out wild beasts
no shepherds knew --
wolf, panther, and boar
as tame as lambs,
so long as his lyre
enchanted them,

who charmed to sleep
the howling winds,
sent back the hail
into the spiting clouds,
withheld the snow
with just a song,

who with a strum
of golden strings,
could silence waves
and still the roar
of breakered tide --

once, but no more!
Orpheus is dead!
Up the wails come
from Memnosyne's
bereft daughters,
and chief among
the mourners, his
mother Calliope,
the poets' Muse.

Mortal, sigh not
if your son is dead.
What is the use
of weeping, when
even the gods
are powerless
to save their sons
from pitiless death.

Gone to Hades
a second time,
harsh is his fate
and unforgiving.
Youth's glory twice
gone: can the earth
bear this much woe?

Eheu for Orpheus!
Eheu for the living!


Tuesday, February 14, 2023

From the Vine



by Brett Rutherford

     Anon., from The Greek Anthology

As a green grape still hung
from your father's vine,
you refused me.

Ripe, ready to fall
to anyone's hand,
red in your prime,
you refused me again.

Just now we passed
in arbor's shadow.
I bowed to you.
Uncertain, you
turned your gaze.

Do you not remember?
Am I too old for you?
Has time not equally
puckered your
face and features?

Refused the grape
denied the wine,
may I not taste
the sweet raisin?


The Cynic's Fall

 by Brett Rutherford

Adapted from Leonidas, The Greek Anthology, vi, 292.

Lookee here, Cypris!
At Aphrodite's porch
the strangest offering
ever, deposited:
a rude staff, two worn
and re-sewn sandals
that everyone knows
belonged to the Cynic
Sochares, whose gaze
went up and over us
without a glimmer
of romantic interest.
See now, his dingy
oil-flask, his worn-out
change-purse full of holes,
his carry-bag full
of crumpled papers,
that long essay
he never finished.
Is he dead? Oh,
not at all. Rhodon
the beautiful one
has made him swoon
with late-arriving love
and the lad made off
with everything portable.
Rhodon, a thief? Ah, no,
for all the booty hangs here
on the temple porch,
a testament to Eros,
and proof that every man,
even a philosopher
with an averted eye,
even an all-knowing
graybeard can fall
from his high perch,
his strong will quenched
by tender passions.
Hail, Rhodon,
youth mightier
than all philosophy!
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That Day in February


by Brett Rutherford

Pink cards arrived
with little hearts
and arrows.

Tomorrow
the senders come
to claim their victory.
peer over the edge
of an operating
theater, as I
am dissected
by tiny, long,
feather-fledged
scalpels.

Pink cards arrive
like individual hornets.
The hive follows,
an angry cloud
in which I sink,
a million stings
of insincere
affection.

I run. They fall
like meteors,
my fast feet trailed
by flaming craters.
Some cave
I crave
until the mail truck
is out of sight.

Unsent, the letter
I most require,
and dead its sender.
Unsent, another
from one who has quite
forgotten me.