Sunday, February 4, 2018

Edel - White














Sunlight filters in through dusty blinds,
Dances on a China-blue vase, brimming with edelweiss,
Overshadowing my Bill of Rights homework, abandoned
On the dark-veined table.


My grandmother shuffles in, her gaze
Traces cotton-coated petals. Her eyes,
Envelop me, same gray-blue as mine,
And I fold in -


To a Carpathian valley of sweet gale and rolling pine,
Whistling to the barred warbler’s tale, gray-blue eyes
Of a man, plucking clusters of edelweiss
For his wife to fluff in a China-blue vase -  


Beside my homework, on the dark-veined table,
My grandmother rests a yahrzeit candle
For those who had no Bill of Rights,
Her lips pressed white, edel-white.

8 comments:

  1. I find this poem so beautiful. Just overall gorgeous. The imagery if very poignant and clear and the message is sincere. My only comment is that there are a few lines that just feel a little boney; a bit awkward. Mainly the line ",which i ignore;" it clearly is significant but it kind of brought me out of the scene and i had to draw myself back in. In general though, its phenomenal

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  2. I think the beauty of this poem is the simplicity. It's really taking place in about 5 seconds, but you set up a nice picture in just a few lines. My concern is the ambiguity about the grandmother. You reference a bunch of things that I have never heard of, so it was kind of unclear what exactly the flower reminds her of. I got the general gist, but it was still ambiguous. Lastly, I really like how you ended the poem - lips pressed edel-white. It was a good idea to end with this image, I think.

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  3. The placement of "And I fold in- To a Carpathian valley..." makes for masterful story telling, pulling the reader into this time warp with a real tactile quality to this valley, man, wife, and flowers described. I found the play on "Bill of Rights" and "edelweiss" an interesting and effective use of consonance, linking two objects that might be assumed to have nothing in common. Maybe a little more about those who had no Bill of Rights; it comes in a little abruptly.

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  4. I actually understand this poem, which I hope doesn't mean to you that it's overly simplistic or anything.
    It's really beautiful- chizki ve'imtzi!

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  5. You are a brilliant writer and it took me a few reads to secure a good grasp. While I don't understand all the references, you made, I feel a sentimental feelings when I read this poem. My favorite is the first stanza I love the descriptive language being used there. Well done!

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  6. I really like the imagery and the descriptive language throughout your poem!! Maybe take out some of the Yiddish words and replace them with English language-- poetry doesn't have to directly let the reader know what so and so is.. Otherwise, a wonderful poem!

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  7. I really enjoyed the beauty and specificity of the descriptions in this poem. Each line was clearly very carefully crafted. I especially enjoyed the sounds of the line "Whistling to the barred warbler’s tale"--lots of nice consonance going on. I liked the way the edelweiss linked the stanzas and scenes together just by subtly being there.

    I would be cautious about recycling imagery, though (which I realize is hypocritical of me). We've already seen the homework and the dark-veined table, so the imagery feels a bit tired when it reappears in the final stanza. In contrast, I really loved the "edelweiss" to "edel-white" transition in the end; there, you take a word that has linked to a particular image which persisted throughout the poem, and, through the slightest word-play, somehow make it entirely new--a strong note to end on.
    I'm also not sure about the line "for those who had no Bill of Rights"--it somehow feels to direct and too intentionally symbolic at the same time, and out of character with the lyrical quality of the rest of the poem. The edelweiss is--not a symbol, per se, but a strong image image which persists throughout the poem and links different times and places in such a natural and subtle manner, that it feels a bit heavy-handed for it to be competing for space with the Bill of Rights hw (not that I have anything against the Bill of Rights).
    (To echo "Searcher,"--shkoiach!)

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Edel-White