Among School Children

Honoring Norman Mallory (Zlatko Waterman) RIP 3/26/13
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Zlatko Waterman
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Among School Children

Post by Zlatko Waterman » September 14th, 2004, 10:14 am

AMONG SCHOOL CHILDREN , or the end of summer
( after W.B. Yeats)

( Caution: The Safety Patrol Officer
recommends a re-reading of Yeats’
“Among School Children” in conjunction with
this poem)

(link)

(http://www.web-books.com/Classics/Poetr ... /Among.htm)



1.

I open the schoolroom window and the
night air dumps in.
Starlight pours down
the line of juniper branches,
dribbles on satin waves
beneath
Naval Station Island
where it rests on the tough yellow chitin
of gull noses decorating the granite scarp.

The late summer dusk
closes like a book
at the kids’ school,
instructional
comics
spill out codes on
crosswalks, table manners,

flowers swallow
the
smell of the wet cardboard
boxes they rode in.

2.

Kids on the floor:

a zombie grownup world of white shoes
staggers at
nose level.

The neighborhood
is still
a practical joke to them
a grin in the mirror
and I
eleven months from sixty
looking for the hand buzzer, the whoopee
cushion of oblivion.


Waiting,
listening to the one- legged gull
hobble

over the scree in the dark,

I put on a record and

Handel’s choir hallelujahs me
to the toilet.

I feed the cats,
drowning a hundred ants in
the plastic moat around the Friskies dish.

3.

When I went to first grade
the dirt reddened my knees
and wouldn’t wash out.
No one told me
I would exit this way
still soiled


but for decades I have
expected to be ugly when I go.

The kids and I
are in the same corridor now
just like Plato said--

something about eggs--
their heads are shining white
and so is mine, the slime
of the forever beyond
twinkling hot with stars there.




On the playground under
a wind-warped juniper
we all dance not knowing
root from needle.

4.

It is a small grace
to become the enemy
to learn the crosshairs from
the business end.


We become the enemy,
while
GI’s from Iowa wrap
their heads in towels and eat couscous
with brown-skinned women
in whose same tents all
generations are born.

The smell of gunfire
carries the thin hibiscus whiff
of baby powder.
Last edited by Zlatko Waterman on September 14th, 2004, 10:59 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Lightning Rod
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Post by Lightning Rod » September 14th, 2004, 10:31 am

I read this piece aloud
I lit a Lucky Strike
and I read it again.
very Yeatxian

I love this Z-ko
"These words don't make me a poet, these Eyes make me a poet."

The Poet's Eye

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Arcadia
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Joined: August 22nd, 2004, 6:20 pm
Location: Rosario

Post by Arcadia » September 14th, 2004, 2:32 pm

"When I went to first grade
the dirt reddened my knees..."

I like it. (I don´t know if it´s because I´m a second and third grade teacher this year).
I´ll read your Yeat´s poem and maybe I´ll reply again.

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abcrystcats
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Joined: August 20th, 2004, 9:37 pm

Post by abcrystcats » September 14th, 2004, 8:30 pm

I like the third one the best:

"The kids and I
are in the same corridor now "

and the beautiful comparison with eggs. And the beginning and the end is really the same place, after all ... you stated it so simply and so well.


Cat

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mnaz
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Joined: August 15th, 2004, 10:02 pm
Location: north of south

Post by mnaz » September 14th, 2004, 8:38 pm

Wow....

Very powerful stuff here. Part four reached out and grabbed me.
Part four, to me, seems like brutal, fractured transcendence.

Thanks, Zlatko

Toerag
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Joined: September 1st, 2004, 7:42 am

Post by Toerag » September 17th, 2004, 7:45 am

This was strongern' an acre of garlic old man....well done

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