On barns …

I love the poem by Peter Newton, above. It’s the editor’s choice in the current issue of The Heron’s Nest. You can read the editor’s comments here. For me, the poem echoes the haiku by Masahide, below (on the Poetry Chaikhana blog):

That careful dismantling of the barn, beam by beam, in Newton’s poem, somehow slows the reader down. You have to take your time with it, just as it would take time to take down a barn timber by timber. In Masahide’s haiku, the barn is suddenly not there, razed to the ground, presumably by accident, thus plunging the owner into poverty. What’s wonderful in this haiku is the acceptance, not only that a life-changing financial loss has happened, but that a positive thing has come from it. The positive is found in nature: moon/ sky. Both poems ‘reveal’ something natural that was there all along but that we haven’t noticed or given due attention to. Basho says something along the lines of – the first lesson of the artist is to follow nature, to overcome the barbarous or animal mind and be at one with it (nature that is). Maybe this doesn’t always translate into the modern world, the modern lifestyle, but the sentiment of being humble in the face of the bigger thing, appreciating our natural surroundings without trying to impose ourselves or take from it, is something I think I need to remind myself of from time to time. So, I’m grateful to have read and reread these poems and I hope you’ll enjoy them too.

2 thoughts on “On barns …

    • That’s very kind of you Ama. There are some amazing poems in this issue – mine doesn’t come anywhere close! I really loved:
      alone again the tangled lives of kelp
      by Lew Watts
      Take care,
      Julie x

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