Sunday, March 18, 2007

Ode to a Lemon

Out of lemon flowers
loosed
on the moonlight, love's
lashed and insatiable
essences,
sodden with fragrance,
the lemon tree's yellow
emerges,
the lemons
move down
from the tree's planetarium

Delicate merchandise!
The harbors are big with it-
bazaars
for the light and the
barbarous gold.
We open
the halves
of a miracle,
and a clotting of acids
brims
into the starry
divisions:
creation's
original juices,
irreducible, changeless,
alive:
so the freshness lives on
in a lemon,
in the sweet-smelling house of the rind,
the proportions, arcane and acerb.

Cutting the lemon
the knife
leaves a little cathedral:
alcoves unguessed by the eye
that open acidulous glass
to the light; topazes
riding the droplets,
altars,
aromatic facades.

So, while the hand
holds the cut of the lemon,
half a world
on a trencher,
the gold of the universe
wells
to your touch:
a cup yellow
with miracles,
a breast and a nipple
perfuming the earth;
a flashing made fruitage,
the diminutive fire of a planet.

-Pablo Neruda

Let this be the poetry we search for worn with the hand’s obligations, as acids, steeped in sweat and in smoke, smelling of lilies and wine, spattered diversely by the trades we live by, inside the law or beyond it. A poetry impure as the clothing we wear, or our bodies, soup stained, soiled with our shameful behavior, our wrinkles and vigils and dreams, observations and prophecies, declarations of loathing and love, idylls and beasts, the shocks of encounter, political loyalties, denials and doubts, affirmations and taxes. (Neruda, “Impure Poetry”, Contemporary Authors, vol. 19-20 p. 310)

2 comments:

Christine said...

LOVE THIS! I LOVE NERUDA!

Ginger said...

ME TOO!

If I could marry any Chilean poet dead or alive, I would marry Pablo Neruda. Have you read his love sonnets?

WOW.

Maybe marrying a dead poet isn't such a compliment to his work since I also want to marry the lobster ravioli at Macaroni Grill (for the O of course). OR maybe it's a better compliment to Mr. Neruda! YES!

Just sayin'.

What?

It's good ravioli!!