Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Midsummer song


Late music from the blue spruce where
the song thrush, straight as a nail, sings
a faultless aria, turns, then springs
off into the darkening cooling air.

June blue night, day till long
past bedtime when I fall asleep
eyelids pierced still by the deep
light, and the fierce high call and leap
last moments of the thrush's song.

15 comments:

robinstarfish said...

early auditions
living christmas tree angel
tut-oh-lay-oh-leeeee

Rosie said...

wonderful times...I hope I can remember late music when winter returns...

HLiza said...

Beautiful..

Elizabeth said...

Lovely. Thank you for providing me with poetry on a hot humid afternoon.
God Bless, E

Pam said...

Lovely simile particularly: straight as a nail.

Is it really light in France till after bedtime? I'm surprised. Unless you go to bed very early.

meggie said...

Oh that lovely long dusk!
What a beautiful poem.

Lucas said...

This is a poem of intense light and shade as the photograph predicts. I love the way the night is expressed in forms of light, and the day seems to be continuing even when you have gone to rest.

Lucy said...

Thanks all. When it's fine in June, it really is among the best of times. The thrush obliged last night, I'd been chiselling away at the poem so in fact it was really only the simile that was left of the original ideas, then was just posting it and he started singing in the tree at just the right moment when it was dusk but enough light to get a clear picture.

Isabelle - well, I do go to bed quite early, but remember we are well to the west of you, so that means it gets and stays light later, and in addition we are an hour ahead of you on Central European Time, and we're on top of a hill with not too many trees and buildings around, so it's still quite light at 11 pm!

jzr said...

Lovely!!

Unknown said...

Looking at this again, I have just noticed that the sunrise (or is it sunset?) seems to be reflected on the thrush's breast. Am I right?

Lucy said...

JZR - thank you!

Joe - yes, the sun sets directly opposite, the last rays of it just grazing the tops of those trees, which may be why thrush likes to perch up there late and sing, as I haven't observed him there at other times of day. It almost seems as though it gives them some advantage to sing earlier and later than everyone else, as he really is still whistling away outside the bedroom window till all hours. They're also the first birds to start up singing in January. One year a pair nested in the laurel hedge quite near to the house. The parents called and called for about two days together for the young to come out, then suddenly they were altogether gone...

Anonymous said...

"Blue spruce" is a lovely coupling. It almost sounds like a phrase of birdsong.

vicki johnson said...

wonderful, Lucy...gosh, maybe this one is now my favorite.

Jan said...

You shine a bright and lovely light on lots of things Lucy through your words and pictures and I hope lots of folk enjoy your work...

Anonymous said...

'Straight as a nail'. Loved it, Lucy.