Archive for the ‘Poems’ Category

My Grand daughter’s Post

August 13, 2008

A while ago

Soft as silk

There lived a goose

The color of milk.

 

No worries

Flying high

No cares

In the sky.

 

The goose was as young

As the morning dew

Clean and sweet

Soft and new.

Hungfu Hill

March 5, 2008

blueabstracthanging1.jpg

Small monkeys lash their tails,
watch with sharp round eyes
as I walk through the temple.

A poem in memory of Bill Wu

February 27, 2008

Colin and I went to China in May 2002. We were on one of the last cruises through the Three Gorges Passage. Our cruise took us from Chongquing to Wuhan. We saw the construction site of the hydroelectric dam which has transformed the valley into a deep, current less reservoir. Eight thousand archaeological sites have disappeared. More than a million people were moved from their homes. 28,000 acres of farmland and around 20 cities and towns have been submerged. I wrote the poem when I came home.

The Yangtze: Three Gorges

Coiled with mist, the cliffs rise
half a mile into the sky.
Looking up, past the trackers’ path,
past the hanging coffins, past the caves,
past the stunted trees,
I see deep blue sky.
Rising Cloud Peak.
Sage Spring Peak.

The riverboat passes villages, orange groves,
fields of pink peach blossoms.
Tall limestone walls dwarf the town.

The river roars.
Winding narrowness,
shallow rapids,
dangerous whirlpools,
currents,
followed by quiet.

Head Rapid.
Chicken Wings.

Fish inscribed on White Crane Ridge:
two carp facing upstream,
one with a lotus sprig in his mouth,
mark ancient low-water levels.

On the road: barbers, plumbers, food sellers.
A welder creates jewelry with his blowtorch,
fired by a garden hose and a bottle of gasoline,
his foot pressing the bellows.

Under a red umbrella a woman sleeps,
sweet slices of watermelon by her side.
Children squat with a deck of cards.
Small groups of people eat noodles out of bowls.

Dressed in a tattered gown of silk
embroidered with dragons, an old man
sits near a persimmon tree.

All this will be underwater soon:
the temple with its wooden pavilions,
pagodas, loggias, reflecting pool,
the monkeys scampering among altars;
the storefronts, streets, houses, fields of rice.

Goddess Peak.
Witches’ Gorge.

What will happen to the Siberian cranes,
the white flag dolphin, the Chinese sturgeon,
the house tucked under a tree?
What will happen to the barbers, sellers, plumbers,
the little girl in yellow jelly shoes,
her mother selling Camel cigarettes?

In a home in Suzhou I saw this poem
on a piece of wood shaped like a banana leaf:

My mind-heart is like the reflection of the moon
in a deep pond on a snowy night
my creativity blooms like flowers
after the spring rain

The old towpath clings to the rockface, high
on the north side of the mountain.
Trackers pulling boats on the Yangtze
sing back and forth, strange chanting melodies.