~Norman MacCaig
Time seems to be racing by -- it's Poetry Friday again! Bits and pieces today. First, here's some of "Aunt Julia" by by Norman MacCaig.
Aunt Julia spoke Gaelic
very loud and very fast.
I could not answer her —
I could not understand her.
She wore men’s boots
when she wore any.
— I can see her strong foot,
stained with peat,
paddling with the treadle of the spinningwheel
while her right hand drew yarn
marvellously out of the air.
read the rest here.
(Three weeks ago, I started learning a little Scottish Gaelic and every day I wonder why I picked a language that is completely counterintuitive. I seem to like it, though, haha)
*************
Empathy Lab UK put together a 2021 Read for Empathy Collection (which includes poetry) for various grades.
*************
An excerpt from "In The Forest of Blue Aptitude" by Brenda Hillman:
So, how should meaning find you?
It is a glow in the cloth. As if a row
of children carried lanterns unopposed
through a forest of blue aptitude:
they looked like you. What they feared
most had never arrived. What they
loved most was already here.
The rest of this poem isn't available online, but read another poem by Brenda Hillman here: The Time Problem.
*************
Bookseedstudio has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Jan!