Monday, September 1, 2025

Small Things

One afternoon last week, as I walked along the edge of a grove of pines and maples, I heard a bird's voice up ahead, high in a pine.  Not a song or a warble, but two firm, quick calls of the same note, with the sequence repeated three or four times.  Then silence.  A minute or so later, the two calls were again repeated three or four times, but from another pine, closer this time.  The message seemed to be something along the lines of: "I'm here. I'm here."  Not an alarm or a warning.  Rather, an announcement of sorts (perhaps a greeting?) to any nearby listeners.

I kept walking -- waiting for further calls, and looking up into the trees to see if I could find the source.  Then, as I passed beneath the overarching branches of a group of tall bushes, a pileated woodpecker flew down from the left, just ahead of me, and landed on the branch of a bush on my right, at eye level a few yards away.  (Please note that I am no expert when it comes to the identification of birds.  I knew the name of the bird because I have long had a reliable source: Birds of Discovery Park (prepared by the Seattle Audubon Society and the Seattle parks department), a two-page list of the more than 200 species of birds that inhabit the place where I take most of my walks.)

What a wonderful sight he or she was: a bright red pointed crest on the top of its head, two thin white stripes on its black face, with the stripes continuing down its neck, and a black-feathered body.  I see the woodpeckers a few times a year, but nearly always at a distance: tapping away up in a tree, my eyes drawn to them by the hollow drumming.  Seldom do I see them close at hand.  After pausing a moment on the branch, it flew away into the sunlight and shadow of the grove.  

I have recently been revisiting the poetry of Saigyō.  A day or so after my encounter with the woodpecker, I came upon a poem (a waka) I hadn't read in quite some time:

Were we sure of seeing
a moon like this
in existences to come,
who would be sorry
to leave this life?

Saigyō (1118-1190) (translated by Burton Watson), in Burton Watson (editor), Saigyō: Poems of a Mountain Home (Columbia University Press 1991), page 158.

These poems we read and love: we carry them within us.  They wait patiently.  When the time is right, we find them again, or they return to us.  Often serendipitously.  Saigyō's poem arrived in such a fashion. 

A small thing, my encounter with the woodpecker, but of inestimable value.  A value best left unspoken, unarticulated.  But not to be forgotten.  One of those gifts which -- suddenly, unaccountably -- are bestowed upon us by the World.

Christopher Sanders (1905-1991)
"Sunlight Through a Willow Tree at Kew" (c. 1958)

Small things, never to be forgotten.  Seven years ago in May, a hundred or so feet away from the spot where I spent a moment with the woodpecker, I came across a dead mole lying on its back beside the same path.  In my post of May 23, 2018, I wrote this about the mole: "He or she was a small, dark-brown thing, about eight inches long, its pinkish-white, fleshy front paws open to the sky.  It was those tiny, outspread paws that particularly touched me."

I closed the brief post with this poem, which has appeared here on more than one occasion:

               A Dead Mole

Strong-shouldered mole,
That so much lived below the ground,
Dug, fought and loved, hunted and fed,
For you to raise a mound 
Was as for us to make a hole;
What wonder now that being dead
Your body lies here stout and square
Buried within the blue vault of the air?

Andrew Young, in Edward Lowbury and Alison Young (editors), The Poetical Works of Andrew Young (Secker & Warburg 1985), page 63.  The poem was originally published in Speak to the Earth (Jonathan Cape 1939).

I find it hard to believe that it has already been seven years since I shared that short time with the mole.  As the saying goes (repeated at more frequent intervals as one ages, in my experience): "It seems like only yesterday . . ."  Should I let go of my memory of the mole?  Am I being "sentimental"?  A fair number of moderns (wise, undeceived, and ironic) are wont to scoff at "sentimentality."  This is sufficient to convince me to embrace it further.

                  What?

What dost thou surely know?
What will the truth remain,
When from the world of men thou go
To the unknown again?

What science -- of what hope?
What heart-loved certitude won
From thought shall then for scope
Be thine -- thy thinking done?

Tis said, that even the wise,
When plucking at the sheet,
Have smiled with swift-darkening eyes,
As if in vision fleet

Of some mere flower, or bird,
Seen in dream, or in childhood's play;
And then, without sign or word,
Have turned from the world away.

Walter de la Mare, The Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare (Faber and Faber 1969), page 290.  The poem was originally published in The Fleeting and Other Poems (Constable 1933).

Patrick Symons (1925-1993), "Oak Arch Grey" (1981)

Exchanging glances with a pileated woodpecker.  Leaning down to look at a lifeless mole lying open to the huge blue sky.  These small things were fated never to be forgotten.  But, when it comes to the gifts the World bestows upon us -- its beautiful particulars -- there is no hierarchy.  Nothing is quotidian or commonplace if we are attentive and grateful.

                         The Escape

I believe in the increasing of life; whatever
Leads to the seeing of small trifles . . . . . 
Real, beautiful, is good, and an act never
Is worthier than in freeing spirit that stifles
Under ingratitude's weight; nor is anything done
Wiselier than the moving or breaking to sight
Of a thing hidden under by custom; revealed
Fulfilled, used, (sound-fashioned) any way out to delight.
.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .     .     .     .     .     .     .     .     .
Trefoil . . . . hedge sparrow . . . . the stars on the edge of night.

Ivor Gurney (1890-1937), in Ivor Gurney, Selected Poetry (edited by George Walter) (J. M. Dent 1996), page 46.  The punctuation, and the ellipses (in lines 2 and 9, and between lines 8 and 9), are as they appear in the original typescript.  The poem was not published during Gurney's lifetime.

"Hedge sparrow."  Yes, I understand.  My afternoon walk takes me along a path that passes through the center of a large meadow of tall wild grass.  Nearly every day, sparrows suddenly appear out of the grass ahead of me, and hop and skip away down the path.  I've come to think of them as companions, but I suspect they don't regard me as such.  Still, I harbor the fancy that they are starting to tolerate my presence.  Small things, of inestimable value.

      Compare and Contrast

The great thinker died
after forty years of poking about
with his little torch
in the dark forest of ideas,
in the bright glare of perception,
leaving a legacy of fourteen books
to the world
where a hen disappeared
into six acres of tall oats
and sauntered unerringly
to the nest with five eggs in it.

Norman MacCaig, in Ewen McCaig (editor), The Poems of Norman MacCaig (Polygon 2005), page 432.

In the year before his death, Walter de la Mare said to a friend who came to visit him: "My days are getting shorter.  But there is more and more magic.  More than in all poetry.  Everything is increasingly wonderful and beautiful."  (Theresa Whistler, Imagination of the Heart: The Life of Walter de la Mare (Duckworth 1993), page 443.)

     The world of dew
is the world of dew. 
     And yet, and yet --

Issa (1763-1827) (translated by Robert Hass), in Robert Hass, The Essential Haiku: Versions of Bashō, Buson, and Issa (The Ecco Press 1994), page 191.  R. H. Blyth provides background to Issa's haiku: "This verse has the prescript, 'Losing a beloved child.' . . . He had already lost two or three children when this baby girl died."  (R. H. Blyth, Haiku, Volume 3: Summer-Autumn (Hokuseido Press 1952), page 433.)

Robert Ball (1918-2009), "Mrs. Barclay's Pond, Harborne" (1949)

6 comments:

  1. The paintings of trees are lovely, and a nice accompaniment to the word pictures of your walks among the birds. There are so many of these little things that break out of hiddenness into delight, as Ivor Gurney puts it, I find it quite overwhelming sometimes. The image he offers of a weight of ingratitude, weighing down the spirit -- oh my! It is stunning.

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    1. Gretchen Joanna: Thank you so much for your kind words about the post. I'm pleased you liked the paintings: the three of them have appeared here before together, and every so often I like to bring them back as a group.

      Yes, little things, small things. Gurney's poem articulates their importance wonderfully, doesn't it? There are so many beautiful feelings, thoughts, and words contained in such a short (and apparently unfinished) poem. As you note, his image of the "weight of ingratitude, weighing down the spirit" is indeed "stunning": "an act never/Is worthier than in freeing spirit that stifles/Under ingratitude's weight." ("Stifles" is perfect.) Words to pay heed to. I think of Gurney's sad, harrowing life, and I am thankful that he still was able, through it all, to give us the gift of this poem (and so many others) that urge us to pay attention, to be grateful.

      As always, thank you for stopping by.

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  2. Hello, Stephen. I enjoy reading your blog. Thank you for posting.

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    1. James: I greatly appreciate your kind words. Thank you very much for your presence here. Take care.

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  3. Now you've made me curious about Gurney's life, which I'll have to take time to look into, and more of his poetry. So interesting, that if his life was sad, as you say, he would have gleaned from it the wisdom to be thankful. I've heard that it's often this way, that suffering can be a gift. I think it must focus the soul's energies.

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    1. Gretchen Joanna: I fear that reading about his life will bring sadness, but I do think it is worthwhile. If I may, here are a few potential starting points. (1) The Ivor Gurney Society website. Perhaps begin with the "Biographical Outline" and "Music Symposium, 1938" links on the top right side of the home page. (2) There are two biographies: The Ordeal of Ivor Gurney by Michael Hurd (Oxford University Press 1978) and Dweller in Shadows: A Life of Ivor Gurney by Kate Kennedy (Princeton University Press 2021). (3) Ivor Gurney and Marion Scott: Song of Pain and Beauty by Pamela Blevins (Boydell Press 2008).

      But, as one might expect, reading his poetry reveals his life best, I think. His poems are unflinching and moving. For instance, these three poems come immediately to mind:

      The songs I had are withered
      Or vanished clean,
      Yet there are bright tracks
      Where I have been,

      And there grow flowers
      For others' delight.
      Think well, O singer,
      Soon comes night.
      (Likely written in 1921 or 1922.)

      Song

      Only the wanderer
      Knows England's graces,
      Or can anew see clear
      Familiar faces.

      And who loves joy as he
      That dwells in shadows?
      Do not forget me quite,
      O Severn meadows.
      (Written in 1917.)

      The high hills have a bitterness
      Now they are not known
      And memory is poor enough consolation
      For the soul helpless gone.
      Up in the air there beech tangles wildly in the wind
      That I can imagine
      But the speed, the swiftness, walking into clarity,
      Like last year's bryony are gone.
      (Likely written in 1922.)

      I'm certain your exploration of Gurney will be rewarding. Take care.

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