Sea sings its music and I listen
Sucking sound of the turning tide
as a million grains jostle
empty beach asks wherefore you
silent breeze catches my reply
Denny Bradbury©2014
very best wishes
13 Sunday Jul 2014
Posted in Denny's Diary, Poetry
Sea sings its music and I listen
Sucking sound of the turning tide
as a million grains jostle
empty beach asks wherefore you
silent breeze catches my reply
Denny Bradbury©2014
very best wishes
20 Friday Jun 2014
Posted in Denny's Diary, Poetry
Tags
Despite all the troubles in the world sometimes the feeling of bliss is overwhelming when you wake up and feel the summer morning bursting with life and renewal – my thoughts on such a day:
come blackbird
sing your song
bring nestlings
they belong
in this world
of morning
no ‘u’ for
day is dawning ©2014
This is the first of a trilogy which will form part of my third anthology, probably out in 2015.
Very best wishes, especially to those who are poets or who love poetry – Denny Bradbury
09 Monday Jun 2014
Posted in Denny's Diary, Poetry
A nugget worthy of sharing from the more mystical writings of Emily Dickinson. Some of her small musings are deep and mysterious although this one’s meaning is very clear. I love it:
I stepped from Plank to Plank/A slow and cautious way/The Stars about my Head I felt/About my Feet the Sea.
I knew not but the next/Would be my final inch-This gave me that precarious Gait/Some call Experience.
Very best wishes and thanks to Emily
Denny Bradbury
05 Monday May 2014
Posted in Poetry
Because of the great,
infinite love which God has for all humankind,
he makes no distinction in love between the blessed soul of Christ
and the lowliest of the souls that are to be saved . . .
We should highly rejoice that God dwells in our soul
and still more highly should we rejoice that our soul dwells in God.
Our soul is made to be God’s dwelling place,
and the dwelling place of our soul
is God who was never made.
Julian’s words from over six centuries ago focus on God’s warmth, nurturance, compassion, generosity and love. She is focused on desire for human salvation: “he makes no distinction in love between the blessed soul of Christ/and the lowliest of the souls that are to be saved”.
She has been a source of inspiration for many writers, including Denny Bradbury, who writes about her in “The Call.”
Denny wonders about Julian’s origins, “I don’t know your name/the one that your mother would call/as you wandered away from your home/in the grip of your holy enthral”. She looks back on her life and ponders whether Julian was the same person before God’s revelations to her: “were you always convinced of your goal/did you instinctively know what is right/was yours always a pure childish soul?”.
She wonders if her religious beliefs are are strong as Julian’s “Shall I ever be even so true/to a tenth of what you left behind?” but admits that “only god knows”.
The Call
Mother Julian! Mother Julian!
I don’t know your name
the one that your mother would call
as you wandered away from your home
in the grip of your holy enthral.
As you sat looking out at the blue
of the sky be it daytime or night
were you always convinced of your goal
did you instinctively know what is right
was yours always a pure childish soul?
Did God’s voice on the wind or the tide
gently slide in with delight
and rock you with thoughts so divine
you said, ‘Now I’m for an Anchorite
I know the course that is mine’
Was it simple for you, did you doubt
were you ever tempted to sin?
When children bullied and fought
were you there on the edge looking in
thinking violence will all come to nought?
I hope that you gave up some gritty
childhood pleasures and joys
that you threw sticks and muddied the water
and you cried over old broken toys
wishing to stay evermore as a daughter
freezing time that was precious and good
but then you discovered your Father
in churches so simple and plain
that you walked away from your family
a much greater one for to gain.
How proud and how sad was your mother
when you donned the linen pure
the mark of your face in her memory
full of light and conviction so sure
holy work the one truth in your story.
Do I envy you the faith that was riven
so deep in your brilliant mind?
Shall I ever be even so true
to a tenth of what you left behind?
Only God knows but maybe I do!
10 Thursday Apr 2014
Posted in Poetry
Tags
When sijo poetry first appeared in the late 14th century, it was regarded as many as unique to Korea, as it was originally written in Korean. As such, many early sijo poems have had to be translated.
Hwang Jini is widely regarded as one of the leading Sijo poets, and her work in the 16th century focused on love and longing.
Alas, what have I done? didn’t I know how I would yearn?
Had I but bid him stay, How could he have gone?
But stubborn, I sent him away, and now such longing learn!
A common theme in Jini’s work is wanting someone who is absent, and wishing for their return. In the poem above, Hwang Jini is clearly pining for her lost love, How could he have gone? She doesn’t feel like he could return, I sent him away, and now such longing learn. However, in the poem below, while she is pining for a lover, she believes he could return.
Oh that I might capture the essence of this deep midwinter night
And fold it softly into the waft of a spring-moon quilt,
Then fondly uncoil it the night my beloved returns.
Hwang here hopes to capture the essence of this night in the sensual poem above as she waits for her lover to return, as she folds it softly, before she’ll fondly uncoil it the night her beloved comes back.
Like Hwang, Denny’s Bradbury sijo poem also looks at love.
What I have is mine but I share with you
All the apples and grapes and oranges too
Water is the world’s song
Denny clearly gives everything she has to her beloved too. Like Hwang shares the essence of that night with her partner, Denny shares all that she has. Both women use objects to describe their love, with Denny using fruit to represent love, and Hwang using a quilt, with the obvious sexual connotations that come with using an object from the bedroom to symbolise love.
Denny’s contemporary poem, however, could also be seen as a love letter to the world. There is no particular person that this is clearly addressed to. Water is the world’s song suggests a more general love, that Denny here wants to bring across her caring nature, and her generosity and an all-giving love, compared to the Hwang’s sijo, which is referring to a more sexual love.