Poetry

B.Z. Niditch
PROFILE About me Poetry (81)


B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 27 february 2014

NATURE'S WOODWINDS

Deep down
at the crag's edge
the leaves tumble across
the great green hills
as portents
of your solitude
knowing the path
to climb
up the shadowy mountain
and deserted peaks
will be clear
for a lone traveler
with his backpack
full of pure poems
the shadows blush
at first light
expecting
the woodwinds
to sound 
near the saxifrage 
with blackberries
all around
as I spy
a mapped trail
shielding me
from quivering trees
a piano sonata
in the distance
with an echo
of capturing
a passage of Chopin
from this moment.


number of comments: 0 | rating: 1 | detail

B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 10 august 2012

GOODBYE 20th

Twenty centuries
of hushed secrets;
Stalin grins
like a bad toothpick,
sending away souls
to the Gulag
in caravans of archangels
somewhere in snowy
Siberian towns;
the "new man"
building on ant hills
of humanity,
in Warsaw
a roll calls your name
in a manacled world
of arrivals and departures
that never make 
the daily news.


number of comments: 0 | rating: 1 | detail

B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 28 february 2014

RECITAL

The thunderstorm
daydream leaps
over a mushroom search
my eyes are volcanoes
at the grand piano
opening here in Warsaw
chasing my sunny breath
on the bridge
late for an afternoon recital
the "E" string
walks away from me
unsuspecting the passages
of Chopin's embracing notes.


number of comments: 0 | rating: 1 | detail

B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 14 september 2016

TO ROCK THE BOAT

To rock the boat over me 
knowing an aging poet
is always in exile
shipwrecked on the ocean
or by merely visiting
the company of another.
 


number of comments: 0 | rating: 0 | detail

B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 14 september 2016

THE TAXI CAB MAN

The poet asks how much
as his Dutch friend
puts his hand
on the meter
does not dare
to talk about money
at new year's time
they are both tired
and stood up tonight
by their double dates
two bouquets of roses
lie on the front seat,
the poet needs to
study French
in the library
on the back bench
waiting for his exam,
but he will not take
the cab driver away
from his grave yard shift
lasting a life time.


number of comments: 0 | rating: 0 | detail

B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 14 september 2016

AT THE THEATER

Watching 
"The Seagull"
with my friends
up in the balcony
with a confessional
love poem 
slowly emerging
in my smiling
imagination,
there is no language
that could sabotage
or upstage
the Beat in me
with my sax of a soul 
out here
in the provinces
of France 
anyway 
it is starting to rain
off the islands
and my girl friend
suddenly asks me 
for tickets
to see Adele
wondering if our life
merely repeats
the family dialogue
from any generation
in any lyrical play
or musical language
will send me back
to my early childhood
making my thoughts
and aching spirit rise
between two continents.


number of comments: 0 | rating: 0 | detail

B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 14 september 2016

A FUTURE POET

Who will wish
to become a poet
is a dreamer
of the surreal
who dresses 
in a white suit
and coat of many colors
speaks in dada
from two tongues,
Polish and French
plays hide and seek
by a bench of a monastery
under hidden garden walls
the winds rise up
from the dusty rain 
round his eyelids
near the edge 
of the shore.


number of comments: 0 | rating: 0 | detail

B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 16 october 2012

RETURN TO WARSAW

No inspection needed
at the border,
caught by authorities
reading "Trans-Atlantyk"
on a train
with the picture and odor
of the Katyn forest
and Treblinka, 
from an old obituary notice
in a tabloid newspaper
stuffed in my shabby suitcase,
with a faded cross and star
on the luggage logo
by aimless trees
returning to Poland
after forty years of rain,
does anyone leave here
or return
without radar or passport
marked exile, pious
or cosmopolitan
stamped in one's conscience
of a lost soul.


number of comments: 0 | rating: 0 | detail

B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 7 september 2016

T.S. ELIOT AT ROCKPORT

It is to the rocks at Pigeon Cove
watching the cormorants
and not to the monotonous tide
at St. Ann's sandbar
that will salvage your name
it is to the ocean
and not to the fluid borders
that will embroider you
by the stones and surf
in the morning mist
of your mineral waters
that will anoint you
from the anchors
of the tourist boat 
from Boston
through a water song shadow
that will offer prayer
to your conscience
in a cup's communion
and it is to the silence
of the eagle
perched on the harbor dock
in the windshield of the sun
that will lock your eyelids
into your torpor of mind
familiar though
a threatening storm
that will save the whole sky
in a flushed warm
August dog day
of a fevered heat wave
that leaves
your conflated memory
in language
by a daybreak sentence
to make any sense
as the birds chatter
and the clouds scatter
why does it matter,
by the parking lots
of visitors with their mirrors
of the past that enfold across 
their own corridors
as maps are lost on bridges
and are caught by the lone sail
down the hills 
by the rails of the last train
that sought to visit  by the dunes
or pursue a wanton shadow
of days that are narrow
as you kneel by your bed
by nail scarred hands
knowing as the noon bell rings
and a choir sings
inside you believes the face
of a memoir
is being composed
and small birds are clinging
to Evergreen branches
by the muggy rose garden
to pardon us all in grace.


number of comments: 0 | rating: 0 | detail

B.Z. Niditch

B.Z. Niditch, 7 september 2016

A KID AT THE CHELSEA

In a hotel room with a small t.v.
staring at cartoons, commercials
game shows and comedies
where at noon in a grainy stall
you leave your lame worry
for all the walled slogans
of graffiti
in a flushed shower
of a vocabulary
of assaulting words
(while I'm all in prayer 
of St. Francis
with melancholy 
but hope to attain
better in an after life)
with this continued
rainy abyss
waiting for a brief 
answer of "Yes"
near my Advent clock radio
without an hour's prohibition
of  sister doing
origami for a stranger
wanting to be spent anywhere
than in this hourly
Kafka burlesque
by the florid window
hearing a flock
of pigeons and a crow
in a metamorphosis 
of humoresque
when the time is set
for creation
or to be at another
train track
to visit the 14th station
or else crossing
in another direction
at no man's land 
at Christmas time
to be near Bethlehem's manger
yet an art director
wants to view
my play tomorrow
about Roualt's colorful clown
and coming down from
the bay at Boston
to audition on 
off-off-Broadway
racked by sorrow,
I try to pray.


number of comments: 0 | rating: 0 | detail


  10 - 30 - 100  




Terms of use | Privacy policy | Contact

Copyright © 2010 truml.com, by using this service you accept terms of use.


contact with us






Report this item

You have to be logged in to use this feature. please register

Ta strona używa plików cookie w celu usprawnienia i ułatwienia dostępu do serwisu oraz prowadzenia danych statystycznych. Dalsze korzystanie z tej witryny oznacza akceptację tego stanu rzeczy.    Polityka Prywatności   
ROZUMIEM
1