Doubtlessly there’s a very logical explanation, because strongly perfumed flowers are already in bloom, like this mahonia, which smells rather honeyish, like oilseed rape perhaps:
Or this little creamy white bloom that I think is sweet box –
to start with, because of the perfume, I thought it might be some strange kind
of jasmine, even though the flower is not right for that. But, like jasmine, it
seems to perfume the air for a good distance around:
Late in the winter came one
day
When there was a whiff on
the wind,
a suspicion, a cry not to
be heard
of perhaps blossoms, perhaps green
of perhaps blossoms, perhaps green
grass and clean hills lifting rolling
shoulders.
Does the nose get the cry of spring
Does the nose get the cry of spring
first of all? is the nose
thankful
and thrilled first of all?
2.
If the blossoms come down
so they must fall on snow
because spring comes this year
before winter is gone,
then both snow and blossoms look sad:
peaches, cherries, the red summer apples,
all say it is a hard year.
The wind has its own way of picking off
2.
If the blossoms come down
so they must fall on snow
because spring comes this year
before winter is gone,
then both snow and blossoms look sad:
peaches, cherries, the red summer apples,
all say it is a hard year.
The wind has its own way of picking off
the smell of peach blossoms
and then
carrying that smell miles
and miles.
Women washing dishes in lonely, farmhouses
Women washing dishes in lonely, farmhouses
stand at the door and say,
“Something is
happening.”’
A little foam of the summer sea
A little foam of the summer sea
of blossoms,
a foam finger of white leaves,
a foam finger of white leaves,
shut these away—
high into the summer wind
runners.
Let the wind be white too.
Let the wind be white too.
I love that first stanza, with the ‘whiff on the wind’ and
the ‘perhaps blossoms’ and the thought that of all the senses it’s smell that recognises
spring first, rather than sight, or sound.
And this year I discovered Kathleen Jamie’s poem, The
Dash, which also seems to capture the magic of that moment when the year turns, though for her
the arrival of spring is heralded by a pair of birds returning to Scotland
after wintering somewhere warmer. But the sense of joy is the same, and the
feeling of exhilaration that a longed-for event has finally arrived, and I
think it’s interesting that Sandburg and Jamie both have the wind blowing
spring in quite suddenly – there’s no gradual creeping-in of a new season.
Every mid-February
those first days arrive
when the sun rises
higher than the Black
Hill at last. Brightness
and a crazy breeze
course from the same airt -
turned clods gleam, the trees’
topmost branches bend
shivering downwind.
They chase, this lithe pair
out of the far south
west, and though scalding
to our wintered eyes
look; we cry, it’s here
This
poem comes from her collection The Overhaul,
which I finally got round to buying because I enjoyed ‘Findings’ and ‘Sightlines’
so much – these two books both contain essays, or reflections, mainly on nature
and wild things, and Jamie’s prose is beautifully lyrical, as she uses animals,
birds, found objects as a kind of focus to comment on life. I thought they were
wonderful, but Jamie is primarily a poet, and I have been meaning to explore
her poetry for quite a while, but was wary, because I’d read reviews complaining
that her use of Scottish dialect words made her work difficult to understand.
I admit some kind of glossary would be useful, but even if you don’t appreciates the fine nuances in her choice of words it’s not that difficult to grasp her meaning, and there’s always Google – I know lots of people don’t like it, but I found airt without any trouble, and now know it has to do with direction, as in the compass.
She’s
very much a nature poet, who observes creatures and landscapes, and she has a wonderful
and unusual way with words and language, that makes you look afresh at the
world around you, and think about it in a different fashion. ‘Wintered eyes’,
for example, is such an unlikely pairing, yet it’s absolutely right, describing
how tired and jaded we feel after a long, hard winter, and how different the
world (and our view of it) becomes when spring arrives, bringing the hope of
better things ahead.
The poems need to be read slowly, and thought about, one at a time, so that’s what I’m doing, and so far I’m enjoying them very much, and looking forward to reading more of her work in the future.
That is lovely. Cornwall is still grey and damp, so I'm pleased to be reminded that spring shouldn't be too far away.
ReplyDeleteBut you have spectacular scenery in your part of the world, even when it's grey and damp! Actually, it looks lovely here at the moment - the two photos in the post were taken a couple of weeks back, when I first smelled spring, and now there are brightly coloured daffodils and crocuses blooming everywhere.
DeleteThe evergreen plant with the white flowers is Sarcocca. In our last house we had one by the east-facing front door so the sun brought out the scent, eventually it got too much for us ... it was so strong. Thank-you for your choice of poems. I loved 'Findings' and must now read 'Sightlines'.
ReplyDeleteThank you Noney - apparently Sarcocca is the proper name for sweet box. It must be where my 'smell of spring' comes from! It's lovely in an open space, but I imagine it could be overpowering in a garden.
DeleteDo read 'Sightlines', it's every bit as good as Findings. Then try some of her poetry.
Lovely poetry! And I love spring too. We're behind you in spring, no flowers yet, but the weather is warming up and thank God the snow is gone.
ReplyDeleteWhere we are we had a dusting of snow on Boxing Day, and another day when it snowed and settled a bit, then vanished - if you blinked you'd have missed it! So we can't really complain. but all the same, I'm glad spring seems to be here.
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