Louis MacNeice's "Selva Oscura" brings to mind a quiet poem about two people who are not lost in a "dark wood." The poem is by Stanley Cook (1922-1991), who deserves to be better known.
Second Marriage
The sky stops crying and in a sudden smile
Of childish sunshine the rain steams on the roofs;
Widow who has married widower
Poses outside the Registry for photographs.
Their grown up children are there
And damp confetti like a burst from a bag
Accumulated from a morning's marriages
Is second-hand for them against the door.
In the wood of the world where neither of them is lost
They take each other by the hand politely;
Borrowers going to and from the Library
Pass through the group as if it were a ghost.
Stanley Cook, Woods Beyond a Cornfield: Collected Poems (1995).
Stanley Roy Badmin
"Wharfedale Looking Towards Grassington, Yorkshire"
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2 comments:
Beautiful poem and artwork. Thank you for the introduction.
From My Easy Chair: Thank you very much for visiting and commenting again. I'm pleased that you liked the poem and the painting. I have only recently discovered Stanley Cook's poetry, and am still exploring it.
Thanks again.
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